WO1997043473A1 - High surface area nanofibers - Google Patents

High surface area nanofibers Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO1997043473A1
WO1997043473A1 PCT/US1997/007979 US9707979W WO9743473A1 WO 1997043473 A1 WO1997043473 A1 WO 1997043473A1 US 9707979 W US9707979 W US 9707979W WO 9743473 A1 WO9743473 A1 WO 9743473A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
nanofiber
surface area
high surface
recited
coating
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1997/007979
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Howard Tennent
David Moy
Chun-Ming Niu
Original Assignee
Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. filed Critical Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc.
Priority to AU29396/97A priority Critical patent/AU722823B2/en
Priority to EP97923634A priority patent/EP0907773B1/en
Priority to JP54100597A priority patent/JP3983292B2/en
Priority to DE69736519T priority patent/DE69736519T2/en
Priority to BR9710708A priority patent/BR9710708A/en
Priority to CA002255025A priority patent/CA2255025C/en
Priority to IL12697797A priority patent/IL126977A0/en
Publication of WO1997043473A1 publication Critical patent/WO1997043473A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D02YARNS; MECHANICAL FINISHING OF YARNS OR ROPES; WARPING OR BEAMING
    • D02GCRIMPING OR CURLING FIBRES, FILAMENTS, THREADS, OR YARNS; YARNS OR THREADS
    • D02G3/00Yarns or threads, e.g. fancy yarns; Processes or apparatus for the production thereof, not otherwise provided for
    • D02G3/22Yarns or threads characterised by constructional features, e.g. blending, filament/fibre
    • D02G3/36Cored or coated yarns or threads
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01FCHEMICAL FEATURES IN THE MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL FILAMENTS, THREADS, FIBRES, BRISTLES OR RIBBONS; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF CARBON FILAMENTS
    • D01F11/00Chemical after-treatment of artificial filaments or the like during manufacture
    • D01F11/10Chemical after-treatment of artificial filaments or the like during manufacture of carbon
    • D01F11/14Chemical after-treatment of artificial filaments or the like during manufacture of carbon with organic compounds, e.g. macromolecular compounds
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01FCHEMICAL FEATURES IN THE MANUFACTURE OF ARTIFICIAL FILAMENTS, THREADS, FIBRES, BRISTLES OR RIBBONS; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF CARBON FILAMENTS
    • D01F9/00Artificial filaments or the like of other substances; Manufacture thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture of carbon filaments
    • D01F9/08Artificial filaments or the like of other substances; Manufacture thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture of carbon filaments of inorganic material
    • D01F9/12Carbon filaments; Apparatus specially adapted for the manufacture thereof
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D10INDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBLASSES OF SECTION D, RELATING TO TEXTILES
    • D10BINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBLASSES OF SECTION D, RELATING TO TEXTILES
    • D10B2101/00Inorganic fibres
    • D10B2101/10Inorganic fibres based on non-oxides other than metals
    • D10B2101/12Carbon; Pitch
    • D10B2101/122Nanocarbons
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/29Coated or structually defined flake, particle, cell, strand, strand portion, rod, filament, macroscopic fiber or mass thereof
    • Y10T428/2913Rod, strand, filament or fiber
    • Y10T428/2918Rod, strand, filament or fiber including free carbon or carbide or therewith [not as steel]
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/29Coated or structually defined flake, particle, cell, strand, strand portion, rod, filament, macroscopic fiber or mass thereof
    • Y10T428/2913Rod, strand, filament or fiber
    • Y10T428/2973Particular cross section
    • Y10T428/2975Tubular or cellular
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/29Coated or structually defined flake, particle, cell, strand, strand portion, rod, filament, macroscopic fiber or mass thereof
    • Y10T428/2913Rod, strand, filament or fiber
    • Y10T428/2973Particular cross section
    • Y10T428/2978Surface characteristic

Definitions

  • the invention relates generally to high surface area nanofibers. More specifically, the invention relates to nanofibers which are coated with a substance, derived by pyrolysis of a polymer, in order to increase the surface area of the nanofibres. More specifically still, the invention relates to graphitic carbon nanofibers coated with a graphenic carbon layer derived by pyrolysis of a polymer.
  • the graphenic layer can also be activated by known activation techniques, functionalized, or activated and then functionalized, to enhance its chemical properties.
  • These applications include, but are not limited to catalyst support, chromatography, chemical adsorption/absorption and mechanical adsorption/absorption. These applications generally require that a high degree of interaction between a liquid or gaseous phase and a solid phase; for instance, a catalyst support which requires that a maximum amout of reagents contact a catalyst in the quickest amount of time and within the smallest -possible space, or a chromatagraphic technique wherein maximum separation is desired using a relatively small column. More specifically regarding catalysts, heterogeneous catalytic reactions are widely used in chemical processes in the petroleum, petrochemical and chemical industries. Such reactions are commonly performed with the reactant(s) and product(s) in the fluid phase and the catalyst in the solid phase.
  • the reaction occurs at the interface between phases, i.e., the interface between the fluid phase of the reactant(s) and product(s) and the solid phase of the supported catalyst.
  • the properties of the surface of a heterogeneous supported catalyst are significant factors in the effective use of that catalyst. Specifically, the surface area of the active catalyst, as supported, and the accessibility of that surface area to reactant chemisorption and product desorption are important. These factors affect the activity of the catalyst, i.e., the rate of conversion of reactants to products.
  • the chemical purity of the catalyst and the catalyst support have an important effect on the selectivity of the catalyst, i.e., the degree to which the catalyst produces one product from among several products, and the life of the catalyst.
  • catalytic activity is proportional to catalyst surface area. Therefore, high specific area is desirable. However, that surface area must be accessible to reactants and products as well as to heat flow.
  • the chemisorption of a reactant by a catalyst surface is preceded by the diffusion of that reactant through the internal structure of the catalyst.
  • the accessibility of the internal structure of a support material to reactant(s) , product(s) and heat flow is important.
  • Porosity and pore size distribution of the support structure are measures of that accessibility.
  • Activated carbons and charcoals used as catalyst supports have surface areas of about 1000 square meters per gram and porosities of less than one milliliter per gram.
  • micropores i.e., pores with pore diameters of 2 nanometers or less. These pores can be inaccessible because of diffusion limitations. They are easily plugged and thereby deactivated.
  • high porosity material where the pores are mainly in the mesopore (>2 nanometers) or macropore (>50 nanometers) ranges are most desirable.
  • a catalyst at the very least, minimize its contribution to the chemical contamination of reactant(s) and product(s). In the case of a catalyst support, this is even more important since the support is a potential source of contamination both to the catalyst it supports and to the chemical process. Further, some catalysts are particularly sensitive to contamination that can either promote unwanted competing reactions, i.e., affect its selectivity, or render the catalyst ineffective, i.e., "poison" it. Charcoal and commercial graphites or carbons made from petroleum residues usually contain trace amounts of sulfur or nitrogen as well as metals common to biological systems and may be undesirable for that reason.
  • Nanofibers such as fibrils, bucky tubes and nanofibers are distinguishable from continuous carbon fibers commercially available as reinforcement materials.
  • continuous carbon fibers In contrast to nanofibers, which have, desirably large, but unavoidably finite aspect ratios, continuous carbon fibers have aspect ratios (L/D) of at least 10 4 and often 10 6 or more.
  • L/D aspect ratios
  • the diameter of continuous fibers is also far larger than that of nanofibers, being always >1.0 ⁇ and typically 5 to 7 ⁇ .
  • nanofiber mats, assemblages and aggregates have been previously produced to take advantage of the increased surface area per gram achieved using extremely thin diameter fibers.
  • These structures are typically composed of a plurality of intertwined or intermeshed fibers.
  • the macroscopic morphology of the aggregate is controlled by the choice of catalyst support.
  • Spherical supports grow nanofibers in all directions leading to the formation of bird nest aggregates.
  • Combed yarn and open nest aggregates are prepared using supports having one or more readily cleavable planar surfaces, e.g., an iron or iron-containing metal catalyst particle deposited on a support material having one or more readily cleavable surfaces and a surface area of at least 1 square meters per gram.
  • each nanofiber extends in the same direction as that of the surrounding nanofibers in the bundles; or, as, aggregates consisting of straight to slightly bent or kinked nanofibers which are loosely entangled with each other to form an "open net" ("ON") structure.
  • ON open net
  • the degree of nanofiber entanglement is greater than observed in the combed yarn aggregates (in which the individual nanofibers have substantially the same relative orientation) but less than that of bird nests.
  • CY and ON aggregates are more readily dispersed than BN making them useful in composite fabrication where uniform properties throughout the structure are desired.
  • Nanofibers and nanofiber aggregates and assemblages described above are generally required in relatively large amounts to perform catalyst support, chromatography, or other application requiring high surface area. These large amounts of nanofibers are disadvantageously costly and space intensive. Also disadvantageously, a certain amount of contamination of the reaction or chromatography stream, and attrition of the catalyst or chromatographic support, is likely given a large number of nanofibers.
  • Aerogels are high surface area porous structures or foams typically formed by supercritical drying a mixture containing a polymer, followed by pyrolysis. Although the structures have high surface areas, they are disadvantageous in that they exhibit poor mechanical integrity and therefore tend to easily break down to contaminate, for instance, chromatographic and reaction streams. Further, the surface area of aerogels, while relatively high, is largely in accessible, in part due to small pore size.
  • the subject matter of this application deals with reducing the number of nanofibers needed to perform applications requiring high surface area by increasing the surface area of each nanofiber.
  • the nanofibers of this application have an increased surface area, measured in m 2 /g, as compared to nanofibers known in the art. Also advantageously, even assuming that a certain number of nanofibers per gram of nanofiber will be contaminant in a given application, the fact that less nanofibers are required for performing that application will thereby reduce nanofiber contamination.
  • nanofiber having a high surface area layer containing pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalytic sites on the nanofiber. It is yet another object of this invention to provide a composition of matter comprising nanofibers having an activated high surface area layer containing additional pores which further increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalysis sites on the nanofiber.
  • composition of matter comprising nanofiber having an activated high surface area layer containing additional pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalysis sites on the nanofiber, which also is functionalized to enhance chemical activity.
  • the invention encompasses coated nanofibers, assemblages and aggregates made from coated nanofibers, functionalized coated nanofibers, including assemblages and aggregates made from functionalized coated nanofibers, and activated coated nanofibers, including activated coated nanofibers which may be functionalized.
  • the nanofiber made according to the present inventio have increased surface areas in comparison to conventional uncoated nanofibers. The increase in surface area results from the porous coating applied to the surface of the nanofiber.
  • the high surface nanofiber is formed by coating the fiber with a polymeric layer and pyrolyzing the layer to form a porous carbon coating on the nanofiber.
  • FIG. 1 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril.
  • FIG. 2 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril taken along line 1 - 1'.
  • FIG. 3 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer.
  • FIG. 4 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer taken along line 3 - 3'.
  • FIG. 5 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis.
  • FIG. 6 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis taken along line 5 - 5' .
  • FIG. 7 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis and activation.
  • FIG. 8 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis and activation taken along line 7 - 7'.
  • FIG. 9 is a flow diagram of the process for preparing fibrils coated with a carbonaceous thin layer.
  • FIG. 10 is a flow diagram of the process for preparing fibril mats coated with a carbonaceous thin layer. Definitions
  • effective surface area refers to that portion of the surface area of a nanofiber (see definition of surface area) which is accessible to those chemical moieties for which access would cause a chemical reaction or other interaction to progress as desired.
  • Graphenic carbon is a form of carbon whose carbon atoms are each linked to three other carbon atoms in an essentially planar layer forming hexagonal fused rings.
  • the layers are platelets only a few rings in diameter or they may be ribbons, many rings long but only a few rings wide. There is no order in the relation between layers, few of which are parallel.
  • Graphenic analogue refers to a structure which is incorporated in a graphenic surface.
  • Graphitic carbon consists of layers which are essentially parallel to one another and no more than 3.6 angstroms apart.
  • micrometer refers to structures having at least two dimensions greater than 1 micrometer.
  • pores refers to pores having a cross section greater than 2 nanometers.
  • micropore refers to a pore which is has a diameter of less than 2 micrometers.
  • nanofiber refers to elongated structures having a cross section (e.g. , angular fibers having edges) or diameter (e.g. , rounded) less than 1 micron.
  • the structure may be either hollow or solid. This term is defined further below.
  • the term "physical property" means an inherent, measurable property of the nanofiber.
  • pore refers to an opening or depression in the surface of a coated or uncoated nanofiber.
  • purity refers to the degree to which a nanofiber, surface of a nanofiber or surface of high surface area nanofiber, as noted, is carbonaceous.
  • pyrolysis refers to a chemical change in a substance occasioned by the application of heat.
  • relatively means that ninety-five percent of the values of the physical property will be within plus or minus twenty percent of a mean value.
  • substantially means that ninety-five percent of the values of the physical property will be within plus or minus ten percent of a mean value.
  • substantially isotropic or “relatively isotropic” correspond to the ranges of variability in the values of a physical property set forth above.
  • surface area refers to the total surface area of a substance measurable by the BET technique.
  • thin coating layer refers to the layer of substance which is deposited on the nanofiber.
  • the thin coating layer is a carbon layer which is deposited by the application of a polymer coating substance followed by pyrolysis of the polymer.
  • Nanofibers are various types of carbon fibers having very small diameters including fibrils, whiskers, nanotubes, bucky tubes, etc. Such structures provide significant surface area when incorporated into macroscopic structures because of their size. Moreover, such structures can be made with high purity and uniformity.
  • the nanofiber used in the present invention has a diameter less than 1 micron, preferably less than about 0.5 micron, and even more preferably less than 0.1 micron and most preferably less than 0.05 micron.
  • continuous carbon fibers commercially available as reinforcement materials.
  • continuous carbon fibers have aspect ratios (L/D) of at least 10 4 and often 10 6 or more.
  • the diameter of continuous fibers is also far larger than that of fibrils, being always >1.0 ⁇ m and typically 5 to 7 ⁇ m.
  • Continuous carbon fibers are made by the pyrolysis of organic precursor fibers, usually rayon, polyacrylonitrile (PAN) and pitch. Thus, they may include heteroatoms within their structure.
  • PAN polyacrylonitrile
  • the graphenic nature of "as made" continuous carbon fibers varies, but they may be subjected to a subsequent graphenation step. Differences in degree of graphenation, orientation and crystallinity of graphite planes, if they are present, the potential presence of heteroatoms and even the absolute difference in substrate diameter make experience with continuous fibers poor predictors of nanofiber chemistry.
  • Carbon fibrils are vermicular carbon deposits having diameters less than 1.0 ⁇ , preferably less than 0.5 ⁇ , even more preferably less than 0.2 ⁇ and most preferably less than 0.05 ⁇ . They exist in a variety of forms and have been prepared through the catalytic decomposition of various carbon-containing gases at metal surfaces. Such vermicular carbon deposits have been observed almost since the advent of electron microscopy. A good early survey and reference is found in Baker and Harris, Chemistry and Physics of Carbon. Walker and Thrower ed. , Vol. 14, 1978, p. 83 and Rodriguez, N. , J. Mater. Research. Vol. 8, p.
  • United States Patent No. 4,663,230 to Tennent hereby incorporated by reference, describes carbon fibrils that are free of a continuous thermal carbon overcoat and have multiple ordered graphenic outer layers that are substantially parallel to the fibril axis. As such they may be characterized as having their c-axes, the axes which are perpendicular to the tangents of the curved layers of graphite, substantially perpendicular to their cylindrical axes.
  • They generally have diameters no greater than 0.1 ⁇ and length to diameter ratios of at least 5. Desirably they are substantially free of a continuous thermal carbon overcoat, i.e., pyrolytically deposited carbon resulting from thermal cracking of the gas feed used to prepare them.
  • the Tennent invention provided access to smaller diameter fibrils, typically 35 to 700 A (0.0035 to 0.070 ⁇ ) and to an ordered, "as grown" graphenic surface. Fibrillar carbons of less perfect structure, but also without a pyrolytic carbon outer layer have also been grown.
  • Carbon nanotubes of a morphology similar to the 4-catalytically grown fibrils described above have been grown in a high temperature carbon arc (Iijima, Nature 354 56 1991, hereby incorporated by reference) . It is now generally accepted (Weaver, Science 265 1994, hereby incorporated by reference) that these arc-grown nanofibers have the same morphology as the earlier catalytically grown fibrils of Tennent. Arc grown carbon nanofibers are also useful in the invention. Nanofiber Aggregates and Assemblages
  • High surface area nanofibers may be used in the formation of nanofiber aggregates and assemblages having properties and morphologies similar to those of aggregates of "as made” nanofibers, but with enhanced surface area.
  • Aggregates of high surface area nanofibers, when present, are generally of the bird's nest, combed yarn or open net morphologies. The more "entangled" the aggregates are, the more processing will be required to achieve a suitable composition if a high porosity is desired. This means that the selection of combed yarn or open net aggregates is most preferable for the majority of applications. However, bird's nest aggregates will generally suffice.
  • the assemblage is another nanofiber structure suitable for use with the high surface area nanofibers of the present invention.
  • An assemblage is a composition of matter comprising a three-dimensional rigid porous assemblage of a multiplicity of randomly oriented carbon nanofibers.
  • An assemblage typically has a bulk density of from 0.001 to 0.50 gm/cc.
  • the general area of this invention relates to nanofibers which are treated so as to increases the effective surface area of the nanofiber, and a process for making same.
  • a nanofiber having an increased surface area is produced by treating nanofiber in such a way that an extremely thin high surface area layer is formed. These increases the surface area, measured in m 2 /g, of the nanofiber surface configuration by 50 to 300%.
  • One method of making this type of coating is by application of a polymer to the surface of a nanofiber, then applying heat to the polymer layer to pyrolyze non-carbon constituents of the polymer, resulting a porous layer at the nanofiber surface. The pores resulting from the pyrolysis of the non-carbon polymer constituents effectively create increased surface area.
  • FIG. 9 A more detailed procedure for preparation of a nanofiber having increased surface area is illustrated at Figure 9.
  • the procedure consists of preparing a dispersion containing typically graphenic nanofibers and a suitable solvent, preparing a monomer solution, mixing the nanofiber dispersion with the monomer solution, adding a catalyst to the mixture, polymerizing the monomer to obtain a nanofiber coated with a polymeric coating substance and drying the polymeric coating substance.
  • the coating substance can be pyrolyzed to result in a porous high surface area layer, preferably integral with nanofiber, thereby forming a nanofiber having a high surface area.
  • a preferred way to ensure that the polymer forms at the fibril surface is to initiate polymerization of the monomers at that surface. This can be done by adsorbing thereon conventional free radical, anionic, cationic, or organometallic (Ziegler) initiators or catalysts. Alternatively, anionoc and cationic polymerizations can be initiated electrochemically by applying appropriate potentials to the fibril surfaces. Finally, the coating substance can be pyrolyzed to result in a porous high surface area layer, preferably integral with nanofiber, thereby forming a nanofiber having a high surface area. Suitable technologies for preparation of such pyrolyzable polymers are given in U.S. 5,334,668, U.S. 5,236,686 and U.S. 5,169,929.
  • the resulting high surface area nanofiber preferably has a surface area greater than about 100 m 2 /g, more preferably greater than about 200m 2 /g, even more preferably greater than about 300m 2 /g, and most preferably greater than about 400m 2 /g.
  • the resulting high surface area nanofiber preferably has a carbon purity of 50%, more preferably 75%, even more preferably 90%, more preferably still 99%.
  • a procedure for the preparation of nanofiber mats with increased surface area is illustrated at Figure 10. This procedure includes the steps of preparing a nanofiber mat, preparing a monomer solution, saturating the nanofiber mat with monomer solution under vacuum, polymerizing the monomers to obtain the a nanofiber mat coated with a polymeric coating substance, and pyrolyzing the polymer coating substance to obtain a high surface area nanofiber mat.
  • a “coating substance” refers to a substance with which a nanofiber is coated, and particularly to such a substance before it is subjected to a chemically altering step such as pyrolysis.
  • a coating substance which, when subjected to pyrolysis, forms a conductive nonmetallic thin coating layer.
  • a coating substance is a polymer. Such a polymer deposits a high surface area layer of carbon on the nanofiber upon pyrolysis.
  • Polymer coating substances typically used with this invention include, but are not limited to, phenalic-formaldehyde, polyacrylonitrile, styrene divinyl benzene, cellulosic, cyclotrimerized diethynyl benzene.
  • activation also refers to a process for treating carbon, including carbon surfaces, to enhance or open an enormous number of pores, most of which have diameters ranging from 2-20 nanometers, although some micropores having diameters in the 1.2-2 range, and some pores with diameters up to 100 nanometers, may be formed by activation.
  • a typical thin coating layer made of carbon may be activated by a number of methods, including (1) selective oxidation of carbon with steam, carbon dioxide, flue gas or air, and (2) treatment of carbonaceous matter with metal chlorides (particularly zinc chloride) or sulfides or phosphates, potassium sulfide, potassium thiocyanate or phosphoric acid.
  • metal chlorides particularly zinc chloride
  • sulfides or phosphates particularly zinc chloride
  • potassium sulfide potassium sulfide
  • potassium thiocyanate or phosphoric acid Activation of the layer of a nanofiber is possible without diminishing the surface area enhancing effects of the high surface area layer resulting from pyrolysis. Rather, activation serves to further enhance already formed pores and create new pores on the thin coating layer.
  • the increased effective surface area of the nanofiber may be functionalized, producing nanofibers whose surface has been reacted or contacted with one or more substances to provide active sites thereon for chemical substitution, physical adsorption or other intermolecular or intramolecular interaction among different chemical species.
  • the high surface area nanofibers of this invention are not limited in the type of chemical groups with which they may be functionalized, the high surface area nanofibers of this invention may, by way of example, be functionalized with chemical groups such as those described below.
  • the nanofibers are functionalized and have the formula [CnHx.-JR. where n is an integer, L is a number less than O.ln, m is a number less than 0.5n, each of R is the same and is selected from S0 3 H, COOH, NH 2 , OH, O, CHO, CN, COC1, halide, COSH, SH, R', COOR', SR', SiR' 3 , Si-fOR'-)- y R' 3 _ y , Si-fO-SiR' 2 -)-OR' , R", Li, A1R' 2 , Hg-X, T1Z 2 and Mg-X, y is an integer equal to or less than 3,
  • R' is alkyl, aryl, heteroaryl, cycloalkyl, aralkyl or heteroaralkyl
  • R" is fluoroalkyl, fluoroaryl, fluorocycloalkyl, fluoroaralkyl or cycloaryl
  • X is halide
  • Z is carboxylate or trifluoroacetate.
  • the carbon atoms, C n are surface carbons of of the nanofiber or of the porous coating on the nanofiber. These compositions may be uniform in that each of R is the same or non-uniformly functionalized.
  • nanotubes having the formula [C n H L -HR ' -R] m where n, L, m, R' and R have the same meaning as above.
  • the surface atoms C n are reacted.
  • edge or basal plane carbons of lower, interior layers of the nanotube or coating may be exposed.
  • surface carbon includes all the carbons, basal plane and edge, of the outermost layer of the nanotube or coating, as well as carbons, both basal plane and/or edge, of lower layers that may be exposed at defect sites of the outermost layer.
  • the edge carbons are reactive and must contain some heteroatom or group to satisfy carbon valency.
  • the substituted nanotubes described above may advantageously be further functionalized.
  • Such compositions include compositions of the formula
  • Y is an appropriate functional group of a protein, a peptide, an enzyme, an antibody, a nucleotide, an oligonucleotide, an antigen, or an enzyme substrate, enzyme inhibitor or the transition state analog of an enzyme substrate or is selected from R'-OH, R'-NH 2 , R'SH, R'CHO, R'CN, R'X, R'SiR' 3 , R'Si-f0R'- ⁇ - y R' 3 _ y , R'Si-fO-
  • the functional nanotubes of structure [C n H L i[R ' -R] m may also be functionalized to produce compositions having the formula [C n H L ⁇ [R'-A] m where n, L, m, R' and A are as defined above.
  • the nanofibers of the invention also include nanotubes upon which certain cyclic compounds are adsorbed. These include compositions of matter of the formula
  • n is an integer
  • L is a number less than O.ln
  • m is less than 0.5n
  • a is zero or a number less than 10
  • X is a polynuclear aromatic, polyheteronuclear aromatic or metallopolyheteronuclear aromatic moiety and R is as recited above.
  • Preferred cyclic compounds are planar macrocycles as described on p. 76 of Cotton and Wilkinson, Advanced Organic Chemistry. More preferred cyclic compounds for adsorption are porphyrins and phthalocyanines.
  • compositions include compounds of the formula
  • the functionalized nanofibers of the invention can be directly prepared by sulfonation, cycloaddition to deoxygenated nanofiber surfaces, metallation and other techniques. When arc grown nanofibers are used, they may require extensive purification prior to functionalization. Ebbesen et al. (Nature 367 519 (1994)) give a procedure for such purification.
  • a functional group is a group of atoms that give the compound or substance to which they are linked characteristic chemical and physical properties.
  • a functionalized surface refers to a carbon surface onto which such chemical groups are adsorbed or chemically attached so as to be available for electron transfer with the carbon, interaction with ions in the electrolyte or for other chemical interactions.
  • the nanofibers must be processed prior to contacting them with the functionalizing agent. Such processing must include either increasing surface area of the nanofibers by deposition on the nanofibers of a porous conducting nonmetallic thin coating layer, typically carbon or activation of this surface carbon, or both.
  • Activated C-H (including aromatic C-H) bonds can be sulfonated using fuming sulfuric acid (oleum) , which is a solution of cone, sulfuric acid containing up to 20% S0 3 .
  • the conventional method is via liquid phase at T ⁇ 80°C using oleum; however, activated C-H bonds can also be sulfonated using S0 3 in inert, aprotic solvents, or S0 3 in the vapor phase.
  • the reaction is: -C-H + S0 3 > -C-S0 3 H
  • Nanofibers behave like graphite, i.e., they are arranged in hexagonal sheets containing both basal plane and edge carbons. While basal plane carbons are relatively inert to chemical attack, edge carbons are reactive and must contain some heteroatom or group to satisfy carbon valency. Nanofibers also have surface defect sites which are basically edge carbons and contain heteroatoms or groups.
  • nanofibers The most common heteroatoms attached to surface carbons of nanofibers are hydrogen, the predominant gaseous component during manufacture; oxygen, due to its high reactivity and because traces of it are very difficult to avoid; and H 2 0, which is always present due to the catalyst. Pyrolysis at ⁇ 1000°C in a vacuum will deoxygenate the surface in a complex reaction with an unknown mechanism. The resulting nanofiber surface contains radicals in a C 1 -C 4 alignment which are very reactive to activated olefins. The surface is stable in a vacuum or in the presence of an inert gas, but retains its high reactivity until exposed to a reactive gas. Thus, nanofibers can be pyrolyzed at -1000°C in vacuum or inert atmosphere, cooled under these same conditions and reacted with an appropriate molecule at lower temperature to give a stable functional group. Typical examples are:
  • Nanofiber-0 Reactive Nanofiber Surface
  • RNS + N 2 Nanofiber-(aromatic nitrogen) where R' is a hydrocarbon radical (alkyl, cycloalkyl, etc.)
  • Aromatic C-H bonds can be metallated with a variety of organometallic reagents to produce carbon- metal bonds (C-M) .
  • M is usually Li, Be, Mg, Al, or Tl; however, other metals can also be used.
  • the simplest reaction is by direct displacement of hydrogen in activated aromatics:
  • TFA Trifluoroacetate
  • HTFA Trifluoroacetic acid
  • the metallated derivatives are examples of primary singly-functionalized nanofibers. However, they can be reacted further to give other primary singly- functionalized nanofibers. Some reactions can be carried out sequentially in the same apparatus without isolation of intermediates.
  • Nanofiber-M + 0 2 > Nanofiber-OH + MO M Li, Al H +
  • a nanofiber can also be metallated by pyrolysis of the coated nanofiber in an inert environment followed by exposure to alkalai metal vapors:
  • Literature on the oxidation of graphite by strong oxidants such as potassium chlorate in cone, sulfuric acid or nitric acid includes R.N. Smith, Ouarterlv Review 13. 287 (1959); M.J.D. Low, Chem. Rev. 60. 267 (i960)).
  • edge carbons including defect sites
  • the mechanism is complex involving radical reactions.
  • the number of secondary derivatives which can be prepared from just carboxylic acid is essentially limitless. Alcohols or amines are easily linked to acid to give stable esters or amides. If the alcohol or amine is part of a di- or poly-functional molecule, then linkage through the 0- or NH- leaves the other functionalities as pendant groups.
  • Typical examples of secondary reagents are:
  • R alkyl
  • H0- Ethyleneglycol PEG
  • Penta ⁇ aralkyl CH 2 0- erythritol, bis-Phenol
  • the reactions can be carried out using any of the methods developed for esterifying or aminating carboxylic acids with alcohols or amines.
  • CDI N,N'-carbonyl diimidazole
  • NHS N-Hydroxysuccinimide
  • Amidation of amines occurs uncatalyzed at RT.
  • the first step in the procedure is the same. After evolution of C0 2 , a stoichiometric amount of amine is added at RT and reacted for 1-2 hours. The reaction is quantitative.
  • the reaction is:
  • DABCO DABCO
  • Suitable solvents are dioxane and toluene.
  • Aryl sulfonic acids, as prepared in Preparation A can be further reacted to yield secondary derivatives.
  • Sulfonic acids can be reduced to mercaptans by LiAlH 4 or the combination of triphenyl phosphine and iodine (March, J.P., p. 1107). They can also be converted to sulfonate esters by reaction with dialkyl ethers, i.e., Nanofiber — S0 3 H + R-O-R > Nanof iber-S0 2 0R + ROH
  • the primary products obtainable by addition of activated electrophiles to oxygen-free nanofiber surfaces have pendant -COOH, -COC1, -CN, -CH 2 NH 2 , -CH 2 OH, -CH 2 -
  • Nanof iber-COOH > see above.
  • Dilithium phthalocvanine In general, the two Li + ions are displaced from the phthalocyanine (Pc) group by most metal (particularly multi-valent) complexes. Therefore, displacement of the Li + ions with a metal ion bonded with non-labile ligands is a method of putting stable functional groups onto nanofiber surfaces. Nearly all transition metal complexes will displace Li + from Pc to form a stable, non-labile chelate. The point is then to couple this metal with a suitable ligand. Cobalt (II) Phthalocvanine
  • Cobalt (II) complexes are particularly suited for this.
  • Co ++ ion can be substituted for the two Li + ions to form a very stable chelate.
  • the Co ++ ion can then be coordinated to a ligand such as nicotinic acid, which contains a pyridine ring with a pendant carboxylic acid group and which is known to bond preferentially to the pyridine group.
  • a ligand such as nicotinic acid, which contains a pyridine ring with a pendant carboxylic acid group and which is known to bond preferentially to the pyridine group.
  • Co(II)Pc can be electrochemically oxidized to Co(III)Pc, forming a non-labile complex with the pyridine moiety of nicotinic acid.
  • the free carboxylic acid group of the nicotinic acid ligand is firmly attached to the nanofiber surface.
  • Suitable ligands are the aminopyridines or ethylenediamine (pendant NH 2 ) , mercaptopyridine (SH) , or other polyfunctional ligands containing either an amino- or pyridyl- moiety on one end, and any desirable function on the other.
  • coated nanofibers of this invention can be incorporated into three-dimensional catalyst support structures (see United States Patent Application for RIGID POROUS CARBON STRUCTURES, METHODS OF MAKING,
  • High surface area nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages may be used for any purpose for which porous media are known to be useful. These include filtration, electrodes, catalyst supports, chromatography media, etc. For some applications unmodified nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages can be used. For other applications, nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages are a component of a more complex material, i.e. they are part of a composite. Examples of such composites are polymer molding compounds, chromatography media, electrodes for fuel cells and batteries, nanofiber supported catalyst and ceramic composites, including bioceramics like artificial bone.
  • PPP polyparaphenylene
  • the reference is insufficient data to compute all the key parameters of this electrode. Additionally, one suspects from the synthesis and from the published electron micrographs that the electrodes so produced are quite dense with little porosity or microstructure. If so, one would anticipate a rather poor power density, which cannot be deduced directly from the paper.
  • Electrodes for both the anode and cathode of the lithium ion battery Ideally, both electrodes will be made from the same starting material - electrically conductive pyrolized polymer crystals in a porous fibril web. By imposing the high surface area of the fibrils on the system, of higher power density associated with increased surface is achievable.
  • the anode chemistry would be along the lines described by Sato, et al.
  • Cathode chemistry would be either conventional via entrapped or supported spinel or by a redox polymer. Thus, preparation of both electrodes may begin with a polymerization.
  • the electrodes would be produced by electropolymerization of PPP on a preformed fibril electrode.
  • PPP was first grown electrochemically on graphite by Jasinski. (Jasinski, R. and Brilmyer, G., The Electrochemistry of Hydrocarbons in Hydrogen Fluoride/Antimony (V) fluroide: some mechanistic conclusoins concerning the super acid "catalyzed” condensation of hydrocarbons, J. Electrochem. Soc. 129 (9) 1950 (1982).
  • Other conductive polymers like polypyrrole and polyaniline can be similarly grown.
  • this invention embodies making and pyrolizing a number of materials and compare their carbonization products to pyrolized PPP.
  • Beside conductive polymers that can be electropolymerized, other high C/H polymers are also of interest.
  • One candidate family, of particular interest as cathode materials, can be formed by oxidative coupling of acetylene by cupric amines. The coupling has usually been used to make diacetylene from substitute acetylene:
  • these acetylenics may be pyrolized and evaluated against pyrolized PPP, but primary interest in this family of materials is oxidation to high 0/C cathode materials.
  • the preferable embodiment is a host carbon which forms C 2 Li on charging with minimum diffusional distance and hence high charge and discharge rates.
  • Pyrolysis variables include; time, temperature and atmosphere and the crystal dimension of the starting PPP or other polymer. Fibrils are inert to mild pyrolysis conditions.
  • redox polymer cathodes which have the potential to further improve energy density as well as power density and conventional spinel chemistry carried out on a nanoscale on small “islands" of electroactive material inside a fibril mat electrode.
  • the PPP may be oxidized anodically in strong acid containing small amounts of water using conditions which form graphite oxide without breaking carbon-carbon bonds.
  • the preferred embodiment outcome would be conversion of PPP molecules to (C 6 0 4 ) n where n is the number of phenylene rings in the original polyphenylene.
  • coated nanofibers of this invention can be incorporated into rigid structures (see United States Patent Application for RIGID POROUS CARBON STRUCTURES, METHODS OF MAKING, METHODS OF USING AND PRODUCTS CONTAINING SAME, filed concurrently with this application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference) .

Abstract

A high surface area nanofiber is disclosed. The nanofiber has a coating which contains pores sufficient to increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber. Generally, the high surface area layer is formed by pyrolysis of a coated polymer. Carbon nanofibers are preferred.

Description

HIGH SURFACE AREA NANOFIBERS
Field of the Invention
The invention relates generally to high surface area nanofibers. More specifically, the invention relates to nanofibers which are coated with a substance, derived by pyrolysis of a polymer, in order to increase the surface area of the nanofibres. More specifically still, the invention relates to graphitic carbon nanofibers coated with a graphenic carbon layer derived by pyrolysis of a polymer. The graphenic layer can also be activated by known activation techniques, functionalized, or activated and then functionalized, to enhance its chemical properties. Background of the Invention A number of applications in the chemical arts require a substance which embodies, to the greatest extent possible, a high surface area per unit volume, typically measured in square meters per gram. These applications include, but are not limited to catalyst support, chromatography, chemical adsorption/absorption and mechanical adsorption/absorption. These applications generally require that a high degree of interaction between a liquid or gaseous phase and a solid phase; for instance, a catalyst support which requires that a maximum amout of reagents contact a catalyst in the quickest amount of time and within the smallest -possible space, or a chromatagraphic technique wherein maximum separation is desired using a relatively small column. More specifically regarding catalysts, heterogeneous catalytic reactions are widely used in chemical processes in the petroleum, petrochemical and chemical industries. Such reactions are commonly performed with the reactant(s) and product(s) in the fluid phase and the catalyst in the solid phase. In heterogeneous catalytic reactions, the reaction occurs at the interface between phases, i.e., the interface between the fluid phase of the reactant(s) and product(s) and the solid phase of the supported catalyst. Hence, the properties of the surface of a heterogeneous supported catalyst are significant factors in the effective use of that catalyst. Specifically, the surface area of the active catalyst, as supported, and the accessibility of that surface area to reactant chemisorption and product desorption are important. These factors affect the activity of the catalyst, i.e., the rate of conversion of reactants to products. The chemical purity of the catalyst and the catalyst support have an important effect on the selectivity of the catalyst, i.e., the degree to which the catalyst produces one product from among several products, and the life of the catalyst. Generally catalytic activity is proportional to catalyst surface area. Therefore, high specific area is desirable. However, that surface area must be accessible to reactants and products as well as to heat flow. The chemisorption of a reactant by a catalyst surface is preceded by the diffusion of that reactant through the internal structure of the catalyst.
Since the active catalyst compounds are often supported on the internal structure of a support, the accessibility of the internal structure of a support material to reactant(s) , product(s) and heat flow is important. Porosity and pore size distribution of the support structure are measures of that accessibility. Activated carbons and charcoals used as catalyst supports have surface areas of about 1000 square meters per gram and porosities of less than one milliliter per gram.
However, much of this surface area and porosity, as much as 50%, and often more, is associated with micropores, i.e., pores with pore diameters of 2 nanometers or less. These pores can be inaccessible because of diffusion limitations. They are easily plugged and thereby deactivated. Thus, high porosity material where the pores are mainly in the mesopore (>2 nanometers) or macropore (>50 nanometers) ranges are most desirable.
It is also important that supported catalysts not fracture or attrit during use because such fragments may become entrained in the reaction stream and must then be separated from the reaction mixture. The cost of replacing attritted catalyst, the cost of separating it from the reaction mixture and the risk of contaminating the product are all burdens upon the process. In other processes, e.g. where the solid supported catalyst is filtered from the process stream and recycled to the reaction zone, the fines may plug the filters and disrupt the process.
It is also important that a catalyst, at the very least, minimize its contribution to the chemical contamination of reactant(s) and product(s). In the case of a catalyst support, this is even more important since the support is a potential source of contamination both to the catalyst it supports and to the chemical process. Further, some catalysts are particularly sensitive to contamination that can either promote unwanted competing reactions, i.e., affect its selectivity, or render the catalyst ineffective, i.e., "poison" it. Charcoal and commercial graphites or carbons made from petroleum residues usually contain trace amounts of sulfur or nitrogen as well as metals common to biological systems and may be undesirable for that reason.
Since the 1970s nanofibers have been identified as materials of interest for such applications. Carbon nanofibers exist in a variety of forms and have been prepared through the catalytic decomposition of various carbon-containing gases at metal surfaces. Such vermicular carbon deposits have been observed almost since the advent of electron microscopy. A good early survey and reference is found in Baker and Harris, Chemistry and Physics of Carbon. Walker and Thrower ed., Vol. 14, 1978, p. 83, hereby incorporated by reference. See also, Rodriguez, N. , J. Mater. Research. Vol. 8, p. 3233 (1993) , hereby incorporated by reference.
Nanofibers such as fibrils, bucky tubes and nanofibers are distinguishable from continuous carbon fibers commercially available as reinforcement materials. In contrast to nanofibers, which have, desirably large, but unavoidably finite aspect ratios, continuous carbon fibers have aspect ratios (L/D) of at least 104 and often 106 or more. The diameter of continuous fibers is also far larger than that of nanofibers, being always >1.0μ and typically 5 to 7μ .
Further details regarding the formation of carbon nanofiber aggregates may be found in the disclosure of Snyder et al., U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 149,573, filed January 28, 1988, and PCT Application No. US89/00322, filed January 28, 1989 ("Carbon Fibrils") WO 89/07163, and Moy et al., U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 413,837 filed September 28, 1989 and PCT Application No. US90/05498, filed September 27, 1990 ("Fibril Aggregates and Method of Making Same") WO 91/05089, all of which are assigned to the same assignee as the invention here and are hereby incorporated by reference.
While activated charcoals and other carbon- containing materials have been used as catalyst supports, none have heretofore had all of the requisite qualities of porosity and pore size distribution, resistance to attrition and purity for the conduct of a variety of organic chemical reactions.
Specifically, nanofiber mats, assemblages and aggregates have been previously produced to take advantage of the increased surface area per gram achieved using extremely thin diameter fibers. These structures are typically composed of a plurality of intertwined or intermeshed fibers. The macroscopic morphology of the aggregate is controlled by the choice of catalyst support. Spherical supports grow nanofibers in all directions leading to the formation of bird nest aggregates. Combed yarn and open nest aggregates are prepared using supports having one or more readily cleavable planar surfaces, e.g., an iron or iron-containing metal catalyst particle deposited on a support material having one or more readily cleavable surfaces and a surface area of at least 1 square meters per gram.
Moy et al., U.S. application Serial No. 08/469,430 entitled "Improved Methods and Catalysts for the Manufacture of Carbon Fibrils", filed June 6, 1995, hereby incorporated by reference, describes nanofibers prepared as aggregates having various morphologies (as determined by scanning electron microscopy) in which they are randomly entangled with each other to form entangled balls of nanofibers resembling bird nests ("BN"); or as aggregates consisting of bundles of straight to slightly bent or kinked carbon nanofibers having substantially the same relative orientation, and having the appearance of combed yarn ("CY") e.g. , the longitudinal axis of each nanofiber (despite individual bends or kinks) extends in the same direction as that of the surrounding nanofibers in the bundles; or, as, aggregates consisting of straight to slightly bent or kinked nanofibers which are loosely entangled with each other to form an "open net" ("ON") structure. In open net structures the degree of nanofiber entanglement is greater than observed in the combed yarn aggregates (in which the individual nanofibers have substantially the same relative orientation) but less than that of bird nests. CY and ON aggregates are more readily dispersed than BN making them useful in composite fabrication where uniform properties throughout the structure are desired.
Nanofibers and nanofiber aggregates and assemblages described above are generally required in relatively large amounts to perform catalyst support, chromatography, or other application requiring high surface area. These large amounts of nanofibers are disadvantageously costly and space intensive. Also disadvantageously, a certain amount of contamination of the reaction or chromatography stream, and attrition of the catalyst or chromatographic support, is likely given a large number of nanofibers.
Aerogels are high surface area porous structures or foams typically formed by supercritical drying a mixture containing a polymer, followed by pyrolysis. Although the structures have high surface areas, they are disadvantageous in that they exhibit poor mechanical integrity and therefore tend to easily break down to contaminate, for instance, chromatographic and reaction streams. Further, the surface area of aerogels, while relatively high, is largely in accessible, in part due to small pore size.
The subject matter of this application, deals with reducing the number of nanofibers needed to perform applications requiring high surface area by increasing the surface area of each nanofiber. The nanofibers of this application have an increased surface area, measured in m2/g, as compared to nanofibers known in the art. Also advantageously, even assuming that a certain number of nanofibers per gram of nanofiber will be contaminant in a given application, the fact that less nanofibers are required for performing that application will thereby reduce nanofiber contamination. Objects of the Invention
It is therefore an object of this invention to provide a nanofiber having a high surface area layer containing pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalytic sites on the nanofiber.
It is another object of this invention to provide a nanofiber having a high surface area layer containing pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalytic sites on the nanofiberand which nanofibers are capable of forming rigid structures.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide a nanofiber having a high surface area layer containing pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalytic sites on the nanofiber. It is yet another object of this invention to provide a composition of matter comprising nanofibers having an activated high surface area layer containing additional pores which further increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalysis sites on the nanofiber.
It is a further object of this invention to provide a nanofiber having a high surface area layer containing pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalysis sites on the nanofiber, which also is functionalized to enhance chemical activity.
It is further still an object of this invention to provide a composition of matter comprising nanofiber having an activated high surface area layer containing additional pores which increase the effective surface area of the nanofiber and thus increases the number of potential chemical reaction or catalysis sites on the nanofiber, which also is functionalized to enhance chemical activity. Summary of the Invention
The invention encompasses coated nanofibers, assemblages and aggregates made from coated nanofibers, functionalized coated nanofibers, including assemblages and aggregates made from functionalized coated nanofibers, and activated coated nanofibers, including activated coated nanofibers which may be functionalized. The nanofiber made according to the present inventio have increased surface areas in comparison to conventional uncoated nanofibers. The increase in surface area results from the porous coating applied to the surface of the nanofiber. The high surface nanofiber is formed by coating the fiber with a polymeric layer and pyrolyzing the layer to form a porous carbon coating on the nanofiber. Brief Description of the Drawings
FIG. 1 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril.
FIG. 2 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril taken along line 1 - 1'. FIG. 3 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer.
FIG. 4 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer taken along line 3 - 3'.
FIG. 5 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis.
FIG. 6 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis taken along line 5 - 5' .
FIG. 7 is a side elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis and activation.
FIG. 8 is a front elevational view of a carbon fibril coated with a polymer after pyrolysis and activation taken along line 7 - 7'. FIG. 9 is a flow diagram of the process for preparing fibrils coated with a carbonaceous thin layer.
FIG. 10 is a flow diagram of the process for preparing fibril mats coated with a carbonaceous thin layer. Definitions
The term "effective surface area" refers to that portion of the surface area of a nanofiber (see definition of surface area) which is accessible to those chemical moieties for which access would cause a chemical reaction or other interaction to progress as desired.
"Graphenic" carbon is a form of carbon whose carbon atoms are each linked to three other carbon atoms in an essentially planar layer forming hexagonal fused rings. The layers are platelets only a few rings in diameter or they may be ribbons, many rings long but only a few rings wide. There is no order in the relation between layers, few of which are parallel.
"Graphenic analogue" refers to a structure which is incorporated in a graphenic surface.
"Graphitic" carbon consists of layers which are essentially parallel to one another and no more than 3.6 angstroms apart.
The term "macroscopic" refers to structures having at least two dimensions greater than 1 micrometer.
The term "mesopore" refers to pores having a cross section greater than 2 nanometers. The term "micropore" refers to a pore which is has a diameter of less than 2 micrometers.
The term "nanofiber" refers to elongated structures having a cross section (e.g. , angular fibers having edges) or diameter (e.g. , rounded) less than 1 micron. The structure may be either hollow or solid. This term is defined further below.
The term "physical property" means an inherent, measurable property of the nanofiber.
The term "pore" refers to an opening or depression in the surface of a coated or uncoated nanofiber.
The term "purity" refers to the degree to which a nanofiber, surface of a nanofiber or surface of high surface area nanofiber, as noted, is carbonaceous. The term "pyrolysis" refers to a chemical change in a substance occasioned by the application of heat. The term "relatively" means that ninety-five percent of the values of the physical property will be within plus or minus twenty percent of a mean value.
The term "substantially" means that ninety-five percent of the values of the physical property will be within plus or minus ten percent of a mean value.
The terms "substantially isotropic" or "relatively isotropic" correspond to the ranges of variability in the values of a physical property set forth above.
The term "surface area" refers to the total surface area of a substance measurable by the BET technique.
The term "thin coating layer" refers to the layer of substance which is deposited on the nanofiber. Typically, the thin coating layer is a carbon layer which is deposited by the application of a polymer coating substance followed by pyrolysis of the polymer. Detailed Description of the Invention Nanofiber Precursors
Nanofibers are various types of carbon fibers having very small diameters including fibrils, whiskers, nanotubes, bucky tubes, etc. Such structures provide significant surface area when incorporated into macroscopic structures because of their size. Moreover, such structures can be made with high purity and uniformity.
Preferably, the nanofiber used in the present invention has a diameter less than 1 micron, preferably less than about 0.5 micron, and even more preferably less than 0.1 micron and most preferably less than 0.05 micron.
The fibrils, buckytubes, nanotubes and whiskers that are referred to in this application are distinguishable from continuous carbon fibers commercially available as reinforcement materials. In contrast to nanofibers, which have desirably large, but unavoidably finite aspect ratios, continuous carbon fibers have aspect ratios (L/D) of at least 104 and often 106 or more. The diameter of continuous fibers is also far larger than that of fibrils, being always >1.0 μm and typically 5 to 7 μm.
Continuous carbon fibers are made by the pyrolysis of organic precursor fibers, usually rayon, polyacrylonitrile (PAN) and pitch. Thus, they may include heteroatoms within their structure. The graphenic nature of "as made" continuous carbon fibers varies, but they may be subjected to a subsequent graphenation step. Differences in degree of graphenation, orientation and crystallinity of graphite planes, if they are present, the potential presence of heteroatoms and even the absolute difference in substrate diameter make experience with continuous fibers poor predictors of nanofiber chemistry.
The various types of nanofibers suitable for the polymer coating process are discussed below. Carbon fibrils are vermicular carbon deposits having diameters less than 1.0 μ, preferably less than 0.5 μ, even more preferably less than 0.2 μ and most preferably less than 0.05 μ. They exist in a variety of forms and have been prepared through the catalytic decomposition of various carbon-containing gases at metal surfaces. Such vermicular carbon deposits have been observed almost since the advent of electron microscopy. A good early survey and reference is found in Baker and Harris, Chemistry and Physics of Carbon. Walker and Thrower ed. , Vol. 14, 1978, p. 83 and Rodriguez, N. , J. Mater. Research. Vol. 8, p. 3233 (1993), each of which are hereby incorporated by reference, (see also, Obelin, A. and Endo, M. , J. of Crystal Growth. Vol. 32 (1976), pp. 335-349, hereby incorporated by reference). United States Patent No. 4,663,230 to Tennent, hereby incorporated by reference, describes carbon fibrils that are free of a continuous thermal carbon overcoat and have multiple ordered graphenic outer layers that are substantially parallel to the fibril axis. As such they may be characterized as having their c-axes, the axes which are perpendicular to the tangents of the curved layers of graphite, substantially perpendicular to their cylindrical axes. They generally have diameters no greater than 0.1 μ and length to diameter ratios of at least 5. Desirably they are substantially free of a continuous thermal carbon overcoat, i.e., pyrolytically deposited carbon resulting from thermal cracking of the gas feed used to prepare them. The Tennent invention provided access to smaller diameter fibrils, typically 35 to 700 A (0.0035 to 0.070μ) and to an ordered, "as grown" graphenic surface. Fibrillar carbons of less perfect structure, but also without a pyrolytic carbon outer layer have also been grown.
United States Patent No. 5,171,560 to Tennent et al. , hereby incorporated by reference, describes carbon fibrils free of thermal overcoat and having graphitic layers substantially parallel to the fibril axes such that the projection of said layers on said fibril axes extends for a distance of at least two fibril diameters. Typically, such fibrils are substantially cylindrical, graphitic nanotubes of substantially constant diameter and comprise cylindrical graphitic sheets whose c-axes are substantially perpendicular to their cylindrical axis. They are substantially free of pyrolytically deposited carbon, have a diameter less than O.lμ and a length to diameter ratio of greater than 5. These carbon fibrils free of thermal overcoat are of primary interest as starting materials in the present invention.
When the projection of the graphenic layers on the fibril axis extends for a distance of less than two fibril diameters, the carbon planes of the graphenic nanofiber, in cross section, take on a herring bone appearance. These are termed fishbone fibrils. Geus, U.S. Patent No. 4,855,091, hereby incorporated by reference, provides a procedure for preparation of fishbone fibrils substantially free of a pyrolytic overcoat. These fibrils are also useful in the practice of the invention.
Carbon nanotubes of a morphology similar to the 4-catalytically grown fibrils described above have been grown in a high temperature carbon arc (Iijima, Nature 354 56 1991, hereby incorporated by reference) . It is now generally accepted (Weaver, Science 265 1994, hereby incorporated by reference) that these arc-grown nanofibers have the same morphology as the earlier catalytically grown fibrils of Tennent. Arc grown carbon nanofibers are also useful in the invention. Nanofiber Aggregates and Assemblages
High surface area nanofibers may be used in the formation of nanofiber aggregates and assemblages having properties and morphologies similar to those of aggregates of "as made" nanofibers, but with enhanced surface area. Aggregates of high surface area nanofibers, when present, are generally of the bird's nest, combed yarn or open net morphologies. The more "entangled" the aggregates are, the more processing will be required to achieve a suitable composition if a high porosity is desired. This means that the selection of combed yarn or open net aggregates is most preferable for the majority of applications. However, bird's nest aggregates will generally suffice.
The assemblage is another nanofiber structure suitable for use with the high surface area nanofibers of the present invention. An assemblage is a composition of matter comprising a three-dimensional rigid porous assemblage of a multiplicity of randomly oriented carbon nanofibers. An assemblage typically has a bulk density of from 0.001 to 0.50 gm/cc. Coated Nanofibers and Methods of Preparing Same
The general area of this invention relates to nanofibers which are treated so as to increases the effective surface area of the nanofiber, and a process for making same. Generally, a nanofiber having an increased surface area is produced by treating nanofiber in such a way that an extremely thin high surface area layer is formed. These increases the surface area, measured in m2/g, of the nanofiber surface configuration by 50 to 300%. One method of making this type of coating is by application of a polymer to the surface of a nanofiber, then applying heat to the polymer layer to pyrolyze non-carbon constituents of the polymer, resulting a porous layer at the nanofiber surface. The pores resulting from the pyrolysis of the non-carbon polymer constituents effectively create increased surface area.
A more detailed procedure for preparation of a nanofiber having increased surface area is illustrated at Figure 9. The procedure consists of preparing a dispersion containing typically graphenic nanofibers and a suitable solvent, preparing a monomer solution, mixing the nanofiber dispersion with the monomer solution, adding a catalyst to the mixture, polymerizing the monomer to obtain a nanofiber coated with a polymeric coating substance and drying the polymeric coating substance. Finally, the coating substance can be pyrolyzed to result in a porous high surface area layer, preferably integral with nanofiber, thereby forming a nanofiber having a high surface area.
A preferred way to ensure that the polymer forms at the fibril surface is to initiate polymerization of the monomers at that surface. This can be done by adsorbing thereon conventional free radical, anionic, cationic, or organometallic (Ziegler) initiators or catalysts. Alternatively, anionoc and cationic polymerizations can be initiated electrochemically by applying appropriate potentials to the fibril surfaces. Finally, the coating substance can be pyrolyzed to result in a porous high surface area layer, preferably integral with nanofiber, thereby forming a nanofiber having a high surface area. Suitable technologies for preparation of such pyrolyzable polymers are given in U.S. 5,334,668, U.S. 5,236,686 and U.S. 5,169,929.
The resulting high surface area nanofiber preferably has a surface area greater than about 100 m2/g, more preferably greater than about 200m2/g, even more preferably greater than about 300m2/g, and most preferably greater than about 400m2/g. The resulting high surface area nanofiber preferably has a carbon purity of 50%, more preferably 75%, even more preferably 90%, more preferably still 99%.
A procedure for the preparation of nanofiber mats with increased surface area is illustrated at Figure 10. This procedure includes the steps of preparing a nanofiber mat, preparing a monomer solution, saturating the nanofiber mat with monomer solution under vacuum, polymerizing the monomers to obtain the a nanofiber mat coated with a polymeric coating substance, and pyrolyzing the polymer coating substance to obtain a high surface area nanofiber mat.
As used above, a "coating substance" refers to a substance with which a nanofiber is coated, and particularly to such a substance before it is subjected to a chemically altering step such as pyrolysis. For purposes of electrochemical applications of this invention, it is generally advantageous to select a coating substance which, when subjected to pyrolysis, forms a conductive nonmetallic thin coating layer. Typically, a coating substance is a polymer. Such a polymer deposits a high surface area layer of carbon on the nanofiber upon pyrolysis. Polymer coating substances typically used with this invention include, but are not limited to, phenalic-formaldehyde, polyacrylonitrile, styrene divinyl benzene, cellulosic, cyclotrimerized diethynyl benzene.
Activation In addition to the methods of activation described in the "Methods of Functionalizing Nanofibers", the term "activation" also refers to a process for treating carbon, including carbon surfaces, to enhance or open an enormous number of pores, most of which have diameters ranging from 2-20 nanometers, although some micropores having diameters in the 1.2-2 range, and some pores with diameters up to 100 nanometers, may be formed by activation.
More specifically, a typical thin coating layer made of carbon may be activated by a number of methods, including (1) selective oxidation of carbon with steam, carbon dioxide, flue gas or air, and (2) treatment of carbonaceous matter with metal chlorides (particularly zinc chloride) or sulfides or phosphates, potassium sulfide, potassium thiocyanate or phosphoric acid. Activation of the layer of a nanofiber is possible without diminishing the surface area enhancing effects of the high surface area layer resulting from pyrolysis. Rather, activation serves to further enhance already formed pores and create new pores on the thin coating layer.
A discussion is activation is found at Patrick, J.W. ed. Porosity in Carbons: Characterization and Applications. Halsted 1995. Functionalized Nanofibers
After pyrolysis, or after pyrolysis and subsequent activation, the increased effective surface area of the nanofiber may be functionalized, producing nanofibers whose surface has been reacted or contacted with one or more substances to provide active sites thereon for chemical substitution, physical adsorption or other intermolecular or intramolecular interaction among different chemical species.
Although the high surface area nanofibers of this invention are not limited in the type of chemical groups with which they may be functionalized, the high surface area nanofibers of this invention may, by way of example, be functionalized with chemical groups such as those described below.
According to one embodiment of the invention, the nanofibers are functionalized and have the formula [CnHx.-JR. where n is an integer, L is a number less than O.ln, m is a number less than 0.5n, each of R is the same and is selected from S03H, COOH, NH2, OH, O, CHO, CN, COC1, halide, COSH, SH, R', COOR', SR', SiR'3, Si-fOR'-)-yR'3_y, Si-fO-SiR'2-)-OR' , R", Li, A1R'2, Hg-X, T1Z2 and Mg-X, y is an integer equal to or less than 3,
R' is alkyl, aryl, heteroaryl, cycloalkyl, aralkyl or heteroaralkyl, R" is fluoroalkyl, fluoroaryl, fluorocycloalkyl, fluoroaralkyl or cycloaryl,
X is halide, and
Z is carboxylate or trifluoroacetate.
The carbon atoms, Cn, are surface carbons of of the nanofiber or of the porous coating on the nanofiber. These compositions may be uniform in that each of R is the same or non-uniformly functionalized.
Also included as particles in the invention are functionalized nanotubes having the formula [CnHL-HR'-R]m where n, L, m, R' and R have the same meaning as above.
In both uniformly and non-uniformly substituted nanotubes, the surface atoms Cn are reacted. Most carbon atoms in the surface layer of a graphitic material, as in graphite, are basal plane carbons. Basal plane carbons are relatively inert to chemical attack. At defect sites, where, for example, the graphitic plane fails to extend fully around the surface, there are carbon atoms analogous to the edge carbon atoms of a graphite plane (See Urry, Elementary Equilibrium Chemistry of Carbon, Wiley, New York 1989. ) for a discussion of edge and basal plane carbons) .
At defect sites, edge or basal plane carbons of lower, interior layers of the nanotube or coating may be exposed. The term surface carbon includes all the carbons, basal plane and edge, of the outermost layer of the nanotube or coating, as well as carbons, both basal plane and/or edge, of lower layers that may be exposed at defect sites of the outermost layer. The edge carbons are reactive and must contain some heteroatom or group to satisfy carbon valency. The substituted nanotubes described above may advantageously be further functionalized. Such compositions include compositions of the formula
[CnHL÷ A,, where the carbons are surface carbons of a nanofiber or coating, n, L and m are as described above, A is selected from 0 0 0 0
II II II II
OY, NHY, C-OY, C-NR'Y, C-SY, C-Y, -CR'2-0Y, N=Y or C=Y, Y is an appropriate functional group of a protein, a peptide, an enzyme, an antibody, a nucleotide, an oligonucleotide, an antigen, or an enzyme substrate, enzyme inhibitor or the transition state analog of an enzyme substrate or is selected from R'-OH, R'-NH2, R'SH, R'CHO, R'CN, R'X, R'SiR'3, R'Si-f0R'-}-yR'3_y, R'Si-fO-
SiR'2-)-0R', R'-R", R'-N-CO, (C^O-)-^, fC3H60)-wH, -fC2H40)w-
R', (C3H60)w-R' and R', and w is an integer greater than one and less than 200. The functional nanotubes of structure [CnHLi[R'-R]m may also be functionalized to produce compositions having the formula [CnHL÷[R'-A]m where n, L, m, R' and A are as defined above.
The nanofibers of the invention also include nanotubes upon which certain cyclic compounds are adsorbed. These include compositions of matter of the formula
[CnHL÷[X-Ra]m where n is an integer, L is a number less than O.ln, m is less than 0.5n, a is zero or a number less than 10, X is a polynuclear aromatic, polyheteronuclear aromatic or metallopolyheteronuclear aromatic moiety and R is as recited above.
Preferred cyclic compounds are planar macrocycles as described on p. 76 of Cotton and Wilkinson, Advanced Organic Chemistry. More preferred cyclic compounds for adsorption are porphyrins and phthalocyanines.
The adsorbed cyclic compounds may be functionalized. Such compositions include compounds of the formula
[CnHL}[X-Aa]m where m, n, L, a, X and A are as defined above and the carbons are surface carbons of a substantially cylindrical graphitic nanotube as described above. Methods of Functionalizing Coated Nanofibers
The functionalized nanofibers of the invention can be directly prepared by sulfonation, cycloaddition to deoxygenated nanofiber surfaces, metallation and other techniques. When arc grown nanofibers are used, they may require extensive purification prior to functionalization. Ebbesen et al. (Nature 367 519 (1994)) give a procedure for such purification.
A functional group is a group of atoms that give the compound or substance to which they are linked characteristic chemical and physical properties. A functionalized surface refers to a carbon surface onto which such chemical groups are adsorbed or chemically attached so as to be available for electron transfer with the carbon, interaction with ions in the electrolyte or for other chemical interactions. Functional groups typically associated with this invention include, but are not limited to, functional groups selected from the group consisting of an alkalai metal, -S03, -R'COX, -R'(C00H)2, -CN, -R'CH2X, =0, -R'CHO, -R'CN, where R' is a hydrocarbon radical and X is -NH2, -OH or a halogen. Methods of preparing surfaces functionalized with these and other groups are outlined below.
The nanofibers must be processed prior to contacting them with the functionalizing agent. Such processing must include either increasing surface area of the nanofibers by deposition on the nanofibers of a porous conducting nonmetallic thin coating layer, typically carbon or activation of this surface carbon, or both.
Although several of the following examples and preparations were performed using aggregated nanofibers, it is believed that the same examples and preparations may be performed with non-aggregated nanofibers or other nanofibers.
1. Sulfonation Background techniques are described in March, J.P., Advanced Organic Chemistry, 3rd Ed. Wiley, New York 1985 ; House, H. , Modern Synthetic Reactions, 2nd Ed . , Benjamin /Cummingε, Menlo Park, CA 1972 .
Activated C-H (including aromatic C-H) bonds can be sulfonated using fuming sulfuric acid (oleum) , which is a solution of cone, sulfuric acid containing up to 20% S03. The conventional method is via liquid phase at T~80°C using oleum; however, activated C-H bonds can also be sulfonated using S03 in inert, aprotic solvents, or S03 in the vapor phase. The reaction is: -C-H + S03 > -C-S03H
Over-reaction results in formation of sulfones, according to the reaction: 2 -C-H + S03 > -C-S02-C- + H20
2. Additions to Oxide-Free Nanofiber Surfaces
Background techniques are described in Urry, G. , Elementary Equilibrium Chemistry of Carbon, Wiley, New York 1989.
The surface carbons in nanofibers behave like graphite, i.e., they are arranged in hexagonal sheets containing both basal plane and edge carbons. While basal plane carbons are relatively inert to chemical attack, edge carbons are reactive and must contain some heteroatom or group to satisfy carbon valency. Nanofibers also have surface defect sites which are basically edge carbons and contain heteroatoms or groups.
The most common heteroatoms attached to surface carbons of nanofibers are hydrogen, the predominant gaseous component during manufacture; oxygen, due to its high reactivity and because traces of it are very difficult to avoid; and H20, which is always present due to the catalyst. Pyrolysis at ~1000°C in a vacuum will deoxygenate the surface in a complex reaction with an unknown mechanism. The resulting nanofiber surface contains radicals in a C1-C4 alignment which are very reactive to activated olefins. The surface is stable in a vacuum or in the presence of an inert gas, but retains its high reactivity until exposed to a reactive gas. Thus, nanofibers can be pyrolyzed at -1000°C in vacuum or inert atmosphere, cooled under these same conditions and reacted with an appropriate molecule at lower temperature to give a stable functional group. Typical examples are:
1000°C
Nanofiber-0 > Reactive Nanofiber Surface
(RNS) + 2 CO + C02 followed by:
Room Temp - 250°C RNS + CH2=CHC0X > Nanofiber-R'COX X=0H,-C1,-
NH2,-H RNS + Maleic anhydride > Nanofiber-R' (COOH)2
RNS + Cyanogen > Nanofiber-CN
RNS + CH2=CH-CH2X > Nanofiber-R'CH2X X=-NH2,-OH,
-Halogen RNS + H20 > Nanofiber=0 (quinoidal)
RNS + 02 > Nanofiber=0 (quinoidal)
RNS + CH2=CHCHO > Nanofiber-R'CHO (aldehydic)
RNS + CH2=CH-CN > Nanofiber-R'CN
RNS + N2 > Nanofiber-(aromatic nitrogen) where R' is a hydrocarbon radical (alkyl, cycloalkyl, etc.)
3. Metallation Background techniques are given in March, Advanced Organic Chemistry. 3rd ed., p. 545. Aromatic C-H bonds can be metallated with a variety of organometallic reagents to produce carbon- metal bonds (C-M) . M is usually Li, Be, Mg, Al, or Tl; however, other metals can also be used. The simplest reaction is by direct displacement of hydrogen in activated aromatics:
1. Nanofiber-H + R-Li > Nanofiber-Li + RH
The reaction may require additionally, a strong base, such as potassium t-butoxide or chelating diamines. Aprotic solvents are necessary (paraffins, benzene) . 2. Nanofiber-H + A1R3 > Nanofiber-AlR2 + RH
3. Nanofiber-H + T1(TFA)3 > Nanofiber-Tl(TFA)2 + HTFA
TFA=Trifluoroacetate HTFA=Trifluoroacetic acid The metallated derivatives are examples of primary singly-functionalized nanofibers. However, they can be reacted further to give other primary singly- functionalized nanofibers. Some reactions can be carried out sequentially in the same apparatus without isolation of intermediates.
4. Nanofiber-M + 02 > Nanofiber-OH + MO M= Li, Al H+
Nanofiber-M + S > Nanofiber-SH + M+ Nanofiber-M + X2 > Nanofiber-X + MX X=Halogen
catalyst
Nanofiber-M + CH3ONH2 . Hcl > Nanof iber-NH2 + MOCH3 ether
catalyst Nanofiber-Tl(TFA)2 + NaOH > Nanofiber-OH
catalyst
Nanofiber-Tl(TFA)2 + NH3OH > Nanofiber-NH2 +
HTFA
Nanofiber-Tl(TFA)2 + aq. KCN > Nanofiber- CN+T1TFA+KTFA
Nanofiber-CN + H2 > Nanofiber-CH2-NH2
A nanofiber can also be metallated by pyrolysis of the coated nanofiber in an inert environment followed by exposure to alkalai metal vapors:
Nanofiber + pyrolysis > Nanofiber (with
"dangling" orbitals) + alkalai metal vapor (M) —> Nanofiber-M
4. Derivatized Polynuclear Aromatic, Polyheteronuclear Aromatic and Planar Macrocyclic compounds The graphenic surfaces of nanofibers allow for physical adsorption of aromatic compounds. The attraction is through van der Waals forces. These forces are considerable between multi-ring heteronuclear aromatic compounds and the basal plane carbons of graphenic surfaces. Desorption may occur under conditions where competitive surface adsorption is possible or where the adsorbate has high solubility. 5. Chlorate or Nitric Acid Oxidation
Literature on the oxidation of graphite by strong oxidants such as potassium chlorate in cone, sulfuric acid or nitric acid, includes R.N. Smith, Ouarterlv Review 13. 287 (1959); M.J.D. Low, Chem. Rev. 60. 267 (i960)). Generally, edge carbons (including defect sites) are attacked to give mixtures of carboxylic acids, phenols and other oxygenated groups. The mechanism is complex involving radical reactions.
6. Secondary Derivatives of Functionalized Nanofibers Carboxylic Acid-functionalized Nanofibers
The number of secondary derivatives which can be prepared from just carboxylic acid is essentially limitless. Alcohols or amines are easily linked to acid to give stable esters or amides. If the alcohol or amine is part of a di- or poly-functional molecule, then linkage through the 0- or NH- leaves the other functionalities as pendant groups. Typical examples of secondary reagents are:
GENERAL FORMULA PENDANT GROUP EXAMPLES
HO-R, R=alkyl, aralkyl, R- Methanol, phenol, tri- aryl, fluoroethanol, fluorocarbon, OH-terminated polymer, SiR'3 Polyester, silanols H2N-R =same as above R- Amines, anilines, fluorinated amines, silylamines, amine terminated polyamides
Cl-SiR3 SiR-,- Chlorosilanes
HO-R-OH, R=alkyl, H0- Ethyleneglycol, PEG, Penta¬ aralkyl, CH20- erythritol, bis-Phenol A
H2N-R-NH2, R=alkyl, H2N- Ethylenediamine, polyethyl- aralkyl eneamines X-R-Y, R-alkyl, etc; Y- Polyamine amides, X=OH or NH2; Y=SH, CN, Mercaptoethanol C=0, CHO, alkene, alkyne, aromatic, heterocycles
The reactions can be carried out using any of the methods developed for esterifying or aminating carboxylic acids with alcohols or amines. Of these, the methods of H.A. Staab, Angew. Chem. Internat. Edit. , (1) , 351 (1962) using N,N'-carbonyl diimidazole (CDI) as the acylating agent for esters or amides, and of G.W. Anderson, et al., J. Amer. Chem. Soc. 86, 1839 (1964), using N-Hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) to activate carboxylic acids for amidation were used. N. N'-Carbonyl Diimidazole
1. R-COOH + Im-CO-Im > R-CO-Im + Him + C02,
Im=Imidazolide, Him=Imidazole
NaOEt 2. R-CO-Im + R'OH >R-CO-OR' + Him
Amidation of amines occurs uncatalyzed at RT. The first step in the procedure is the same. After evolution of C02, a stoichiometric amount of amine is added at RT and reacted for 1-2 hours. The reaction is quantitative. The reaction is:
3. R-CO-Im + R'NH2 > R-CO-NHR + Him
N-Hvdroxysuccinimide
Activation of carboxylic acids for amination with primary amines occurs through the N- hydroxysuccinamyl ester; carbodiimide is used to tie up the water released as a substituted urea. The NHS ester is then converted at RT to the amide by reaction with primary amine. The reactions are:
1. R-COOH + NHS + CDI > R-CONHS + Subst. Urea 2. R-CONHS + R'NH2 > R-CO-NHR' Silylation
Trialkylsilylchlorides or trialkylsilanols react immediately with acidic H according to:
R-COOH + Cl-SiR'3 > R-CO-SiR'3 + Hcl Small amounts of Diaza-1, 1,1-bicyclooctane
(DABCO) are used as catalysts. Suitable solvents are dioxane and toluene. Sulfonic Acid-Functionalized Nanofibers
Aryl sulfonic acids, as prepared in Preparation A can be further reacted to yield secondary derivatives. Sulfonic acids can be reduced to mercaptans by LiAlH4 or the combination of triphenyl phosphine and iodine (March, J.P., p. 1107). They can also be converted to sulfonate esters by reaction with dialkyl ethers, i.e., Nanofiber — S03H + R-O-R > Nanof iber-S020R + ROH
Nanofibers Functionalized by Electrophillic Addition to Oxygen-Free Nanofiber Surfaces or by Metallization
The primary products obtainable by addition of activated electrophiles to oxygen-free nanofiber surfaces have pendant -COOH, -COC1, -CN, -CH2NH2, -CH2OH, -CH2-
Halogen, or HC=0. These can be converted to secondary derivatives by the following:
Nanof iber-COOH > see above. Nanof iber-COCl (acid chloride) + HO-R-Y > F-COO-R-Y (Sec. 4/5)
Nanofiber-COCl + NH-,-R-Y > F-CONH-R-Y
Nanofiber-CN + H2 > F-CH-,-NH2
Nanofiber-CH2NH2 + HOOC-R-Y > F-CH2NHCO-R-Y
Nanof iber-CH2NH2 + θ=CR-R'Y > F-CH2N=CR-R'-Y Nanof iber-CH2OH + 0(COR-Y)2 > F-CH-,OCOR-Y
Nanof iber-CH2OH + HOOC-R-Y > F-CH-,OCOR-Y
Nanof iber-CH2-Halogen + Y" > F-CH2-Y + X" Y" = NCO", -OR"
Nanofiber-C=0 + H2N-R-Y > F-C=N-R-Y
Nanofibers Functionalized bv Adsorption of Polynuclear or Polyheteronuclear Aromatic or Planar Macrocyclic Compounds
Dilithium phthalocvanine: In general, the two Li+ ions are displaced from the phthalocyanine (Pc) group by most metal (particularly multi-valent) complexes. Therefore, displacement of the Li+ ions with a metal ion bonded with non-labile ligands is a method of putting stable functional groups onto nanofiber surfaces. Nearly all transition metal complexes will displace Li+ from Pc to form a stable, non-labile chelate. The point is then to couple this metal with a suitable ligand. Cobalt (II) Phthalocvanine
Cobalt (II) complexes are particularly suited for this. Co++ ion can be substituted for the two Li+ ions to form a very stable chelate. The Co++ ion can then be coordinated to a ligand such as nicotinic acid, which contains a pyridine ring with a pendant carboxylic acid group and which is known to bond preferentially to the pyridine group. In the presence of excess nicotinic acid, Co(II)Pc can be electrochemically oxidized to Co(III)Pc, forming a non-labile complex with the pyridine moiety of nicotinic acid. Thus, the free carboxylic acid group of the nicotinic acid ligand is firmly attached to the nanofiber surface.
Other suitable ligands are the aminopyridines or ethylenediamine (pendant NH2) , mercaptopyridine (SH) , or other polyfunctional ligands containing either an amino- or pyridyl- moiety on one end, and any desirable function on the other.
Further detailed methods of functionalizing nanofibers are described at United States patent application Serial No. 08/352400 filed on December 8, 1994 for FUNCTIONALIZED NANOTUBES, incorporated herein by reference.
Rigid High Surface Area Structures The coated nanofibers of this invention can be incorporated into three-dimensional catalyst support structures (see United States Patent Application for RIGID POROUS CARBON STRUCTURES, METHODS OF MAKING,
METHODS OF USING AND PRODUCTS CONTAINING SAME, filed concurrently with this application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference) .
Products Containing High Surface Area Nanofibers High surface area nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages may be used for any purpose for which porous media are known to be useful. These include filtration, electrodes, catalyst supports, chromatography media, etc. For some applications unmodified nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages can be used. For other applications, nanofibers or nanofiber aggregates or assemblages are a component of a more complex material, i.e. they are part of a composite. Examples of such composites are polymer molding compounds, chromatography media, electrodes for fuel cells and batteries, nanofiber supported catalyst and ceramic composites, including bioceramics like artificial bone.
Disordered Carbon Anodes Various carbon coating structures have also been used in the manufactutre of batteries. Currently available lithium ion batteries use an intercalatable carbon as the anode. The maximum energy density of such batteries corresponds to the intercalation compound C5Li, with a specific capacity of 372 A-hours/kg. A recent report by Sato, et al. (Sato, K. , et al.. A Mechanism of Lithium Storage in Disordered Carbons, Science, 264. 556 (1994) describes a new mode of Li storage in carbon that offers the potential for significant increases in specific capacity. Sato, et al. have shown that a polymer derived disordered carbon is capable of storing lithium at nearly three times the density of intercalate, i.e., C2Li, and appears to have measured capacities of 1000 A-hours/kg.
These electrodes are made by carbonization of polyparaphenylene (PPP) . PPP polymers have been previously synthesized and studied both because they are conducting and because they form very rigid, straight chain polymers interesting as components of dual polymers self reinforced systems. NMR data suggests that the resulting carbon is mainly condensed aromatic sheets, but x-ray diffraction data suggests very little order in the structure. The intrinsic formula is C2H.
Although possibly useful, the reference is insufficient data to compute all the key parameters of this electrode. Additionally, one suspects from the synthesis and from the published electron micrographs that the electrodes so produced are quite dense with little porosity or microstructure. If so, one would anticipate a rather poor power density, which cannot be deduced directly from the paper.
Finally, it is clear that at least two modes of Li storage are operative, and one is the classic intercalate C6Li. The net achieved is about C4Li. Depending on what one postulates is the way of alternative structures and how trusting one is of the deconvolution, different ratios of C6Li and the denser storage species can be calculated. Clearly, however, a more selective storage of the desired species would lead to a higher energy density.
Another aspect of the invention relates to electrodes for both the anode and cathode of the lithium ion battery. Ideally, both electrodes will be made from the same starting material - electrically conductive pyrolized polymer crystals in a porous fibril web. By imposing the high surface area of the fibrils on the system, of higher power density associated with increased surface is achievable.
The anode chemistry would be along the lines described by Sato, et al. Cathode chemistry would be either conventional via entrapped or supported spinel or by a redox polymer. Thus, preparation of both electrodes may begin with a polymerization.
Polymerization According to one embodiment, the electrodes would be produced by electropolymerization of PPP on a preformed fibril electrode. PPP was first grown electrochemically on graphite by Jasinski. (Jasinski, R. and Brilmyer, G., The Electrochemistry of Hydrocarbons in Hydrogen Fluoride/Antimony (V) fluroide: some mechanistic conclusoins concerning the super acid "catalyzed" condensation of hydrocarbons, J. Electrochem. Soc. 129 (9) 1950 (1982). Other conductive polymers like polypyrrole and polyaniline can be similarly grown. Given the uncertainty as to the optimum disordered carbon structure described by Sato, et al., and considering redox polymer cathodes, this invention embodies making and pyrolizing a number of materials and compare their carbonization products to pyrolized PPP.
It is possible to electropolymerized pyrrole in situ in performed fibril mat electrodes to form fibril/polypyrrole polymer composites. The polypyrrole becomes permanently bound to the fibril mat, although the uniformity of coverage is not known. Electrochemical measurements do demonstrate that electrode porosity is maintained, even at high levels of polypyrrole deposition. Importantly, both the amount and rate of deposition can be controlled electrochemically.
Beside conductive polymers that can be electropolymerized, other high C/H polymers are also of interest. One candidate family, of particular interest as cathode materials, can be formed by oxidative coupling of acetylene by cupric amines. The coupling has usually been used to make diacetylene from substitute acetylene:
2RC≡CH + !/202 -> RC =C-C≡C-R + H20 Acetylene itself reacts to uncharacterized intractable "carbons". The first reaction product must be butadiyne, HCΞ C-C≡CH which can both polymerize and loose more hydrogen by further oxidative coupling. Systematic study of the effect of reaction variables could lead to conductive hydrocarbon with high H/C ratios for the cathode material. It may be possible to make products with high content of the ladder polymer, (C4H2) . Cyanogen, N^C-C=N, for example, readily polymerizes to intractable solids believed to consist mostly of the analogous ladder. Syntheses via organometallic precursors are also available.
Like the pyrolyzed conductive polymers, these acetylenics may be pyrolized and evaluated against pyrolized PPP, but primary interest in this family of materials is oxidation to high 0/C cathode materials.
The structural features in Sato et al.'s pyrolized PP which make possible lithium loadings as high as C2Li are not known. There is some evidence that the extra lithium beyond C6Li is stored in small cavities in the carbon or some could be bound to the edge carbons already carrying hydrogens in C4H.
It is possible to vary both polymerization and pyrolysis conditions on PPP and to screen other pyrolized conductive polymer/fibril composites for ability to store lithium. A more controlled polymerization could result in a greater selectivity for C2Li. The preferable embodiment is a host carbon which forms C2Li on charging with minimum diffusional distance and hence high charge and discharge rates.
Pyrolysis variables include; time, temperature and atmosphere and the crystal dimension of the starting PPP or other polymer. Fibrils are inert to mild pyrolysis conditions.
There are two distinct paths to nanotube based cathodes consistent with increased power density: redox polymer cathodes, which have the potential to further improve energy density as well as power density and conventional spinel chemistry carried out on a nanoscale on small "islands" of electroactive material inside a fibril mat electrode.
To form the cathode, the PPP may be oxidized anodically in strong acid containing small amounts of water using conditions which form graphite oxide without breaking carbon-carbon bonds. The preferred embodiment outcome would be conversion of PPP molecules to (C604)n where n is the number of phenylene rings in the original polyphenylene.
If the single carbon-carbon bonds in the PPP are broken in the oxidation, it will be necessary to find the minimum conditions for carbonization of the PPP which permits the anodic oxidation without destroying the carbon-carbon network.
Sato, et al. describe a pyrolysis product whose composition was (C4H2)n. This may not be optimum for the cathode where the goal is maximizing the number of oxides which replace H in the anodic oxidation because these will be quinonic oxygens. The potential of analogous quinone/hydroquinone complexes is ca. one volt - comparable to the Mn+3/Mn+4 couple in spinels. The coated nanofibers of this invention can be incorporated into capacitors (see United States Patent Application for GRAPHITIC NANOTUBES IN ELECTROCHEMICAL CAPACITORS, filed concurrently with this application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference) . The coated nanofibers of this invention can be incorporated into rigid structures (see United States Patent Application for RIGID POROUS CARBON STRUCTURES, METHODS OF MAKING, METHODS OF USING AND PRODUCTS CONTAINING SAME, filed concurrently with this application, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference) .
The terms and expressions which have been employed are used as terms of description and not of limitations, and there is no intention in the use of such terms or expressions of excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described as portions thereof, its being recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the invention.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A high surface area nanofiber, comprising: a nanofiber having an outer surface; and, a high surface area layer on said surface of said nanofiber; wherein said high surface area layer contains pores, and wherein at least a portion of said pores are of a sufficient size to increase the effective surface area of said nanofiber.
2. A coated nanofiber, comprising: a nanofiber having an outer surface; and, a polymer layer on said outer surface of said nanofiber.
3. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 2, wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 5 A and less than 0.1 micron.
4. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 2, wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 10 A and less than 0.1 micron.
5. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 2, wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 25 A and less than 0.1 micron.
6. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 2, wherein said coating is functionalized.
7. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 2, wherein said coating is substantially uniform.
8. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the surface of said nanofiber is substantial free of micropores.
9. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area layer is produced by pyrolyzing a polymeric coating substance, and wherein said polymeric coating substance will carbonize at a temperature below the temperature at which it will melt.
10. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area layer is formed by pyrolysis of one or more polymers selected from the group consisting of phenalics-formaldehyde, polyacrylonitrile, styrene divinyl benzene, cellulosic polymers, and cyclotrimerized diethynyl benzene.
11. The high surface area nanofibers recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area layer is formed by chemically modifying a polymer coating substance.
12. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area layer is applied to said nanofiber by an evaporation technique.
13. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said pores have a minimum length and width of about 20 A.
14. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said pores have a maximum depth of 200
A.
15. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said pores have a maximum depth of 100 A.
16. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the surface of said nanofiber is activated to form an activated surface.
17. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area nanofiber is functionalized.
18. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said high surface area nanofiber is functionalized with one or more functional groups selected from the group consisting of -S03, -R'COX, -R'(C00H)2, -CN, -R'CH2X, =0, -R'CHO, -R'CN, and a graphenic analogue of one or more of
( 1. D na r L haline disul f ide )
Figure imgf000036_0001
CH.
( N , N ' dimethyl pyrazine)
Figure imgf000037_0001
CH.
(Diliydrobenzene) and
Figure imgf000037_0002
(Ferrocene) --graphenic layer
Figure imgf000037_0003
wherein R' is a hydrocarbon radical, and wherein X is -NH2, -OH or a halogen.
19. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 16, wherein the surface of said activated layer is functionalized.
20. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the effective surface area is increased by 50%.
21. The coated nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the effective surface area is increased by 150%.
22. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the effective surface area is increased by 300%.
23. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein said nanofiber comprises carbon and the carbon purity of said nanofiber is about 90% by weight.
24. The high surface area nanofiber recited in claim 1, wherein the carbon purity of said nanofiber is about 99% by weight.
25. The high surface area nanofiber as recited in claim 1, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 65 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 400 m2/g.
26. The high surface area nanofiber as recited in claim 1, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 130 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 200 m2/g.
27. The high surface area nanofiber as recited in claim 1, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 250 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 100 m2/g.
28. A method for producing a high surface area nanofiber comprising the steps of: applying a coating substance to a nanofiber; and, pyrolyzing said coating substance; whereby said pyrolyzing causes the chemical transformation of the coating substance into a high surface area layer containing pores and wherein at least some of said pores are of a sufficient size to increase the effective surface area of said nanofiber.
29. A method for producing a coated nanofiber comprising the step of: applying a polymer coating substance to the outer surface of a nanofiber.
30. The method recited in claim 9, wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 5 angstrom.
31. The method recited in claim 9, wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 10 angstrom.
32. The method recited in claim 9 , wherein said coating has a thickness of at least 25 angstrom.
33. The method recited in claim 9, wherein said coating is functionalized.
34. The method recited in claim 9, wherein said coating is substantially uniform.
35. A method for producing a high surface area nanofiber comprising the steps of: applying a coating substance to a nanofiber; and, chemically modifying said coating substance; whereby said chemical modification causes the transformation of the coating substance into a high surface area layer containing pores and wherein at least some of said pores are of a sufficient size to increase the effective surface area of said nanofiber.
36. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said said high surface area nanofiber is substantially free of micropores.
37. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said coating substance is a polymer.
38. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said coating substance comprises one or more polymers selected from the group consisting of phenalics- formaldehyde, polyacrylonitrile, styrene divinyl benzene, cellulosic polymers, and cyclotrimerized diethynyl benzene.
39. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said coating substance is applied by an evaporation technique.
40. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said coating substance is applied by an immersion technique.
41. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said high surface area nanofiber is activated to form an activated surface.
42. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said high surface area nanofiber is functionalized.
43. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said high surface area polymer is functionalized with one or more functional groups selected from the group consisting of -S03, -R'COX, -R'(COOH)2, -CN, - R'CH2X, =0, -R'CHO, -R'CN, and a graphenic analogue of one or more of
( quinone ) ( 1.0 naptli aline disul f ide)
Figure imgf000040_0001
Figure imgf000040_0002
(Dihydrobenzene) and
Figure imgf000040_0003
CM.
(Ferrocene) κ-graphenlc layer
Figure imgf000040_0004
wherein R' is a hydrocarbon radical, and wherein X is -NH2, -OH or a halogen.
44. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said high surface area nanofiber is functionalized.
45. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said surface area is increased by at least 50%.
46. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said surface area is increased by at least 150%.
47. The method recited in claim 28, wherein said surface area is increased by at least 300%.
48. The method recited in claim 28, wherein the purity of said high surface area, nanofiber is about 90%.
49. The method recited in claim 28, wherein the purity of said high surface area, nanofiber is about 99%.
50. The method recited in claim 28, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 65 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 400 m2/g.
51. The method recited in claim 28, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 130 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 200 m2/g.
52. The method recited in claim 28, wherein when said high surface area nanofiber has a cross-section of about 250 angstroms, the effective surface area of said high surface area nanofiber is greater than about 100 m2/g.
PCT/US1997/007979 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers WO1997043473A1 (en)

Priority Applications (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU29396/97A AU722823B2 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers
EP97923634A EP0907773B1 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers
JP54100597A JP3983292B2 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofiber
DE69736519T DE69736519T2 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 NANO FIBERS WITH LARGE SURFACES
BR9710708A BR9710708A (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 Nanofibers with high surface area
CA002255025A CA2255025C (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers
IL12697797A IL126977A0 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US1778796P 1996-05-15 1996-05-15
US60/017,787 1996-05-15

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1997043473A1 true WO1997043473A1 (en) 1997-11-20

Family

ID=21784546

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US1997/007979 WO1997043473A1 (en) 1996-05-15 1997-05-13 High surface area nanofibers

Country Status (10)

Country Link
US (1) US6099960A (en)
EP (1) EP0907773B1 (en)
JP (1) JP3983292B2 (en)
CN (1) CN1225695A (en)
AT (1) ATE336610T1 (en)
AU (1) AU722823B2 (en)
BR (1) BR9710708A (en)
DE (1) DE69736519T2 (en)
IL (1) IL126977A0 (en)
WO (1) WO1997043473A1 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2004101177A2 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-11-25 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for coating substrates with a carbon-based material
WO2004101433A2 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-11-25 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for producing a porous, carbon-based material
US6858349B1 (en) 2000-09-07 2005-02-22 The Gillette Company Battery cathode
EP1639159B1 (en) 2003-06-30 2015-07-29 The Procter & Gamble Company Coated nanofiber webs

Families Citing this family (98)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20040202603A1 (en) * 1994-12-08 2004-10-14 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Functionalized nanotubes
ATE259893T1 (en) * 1996-05-15 2004-03-15 Hyperion Catalysis Int RIGID POROUS CARBON STRUCTURES, METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION AND USE THEREOF, AND PRODUCTS CONTAINING SUCH STRUCTURES
WO1998021769A1 (en) 1996-11-11 1998-05-22 Gorina, Liliya Fedorovna Method for manufacturing a single unit high temperature fuel cell and its components: a cathode, an electrolyte, an anode, a current conductor, and interface and insulating layers
US6514897B1 (en) * 1999-01-12 2003-02-04 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Carbide and oxycarbide based compositions, rigid porous structures including the same, methods of making and using the same
US6280697B1 (en) * 1999-03-01 2001-08-28 The University Of North Carolina-Chapel Hill Nanotube-based high energy material and method
WO2001007694A1 (en) 1999-07-21 2001-02-01 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Methods of oxidizing multiwalled carbon nanotubes
US6485858B1 (en) * 1999-08-23 2002-11-26 Catalytic Materials Graphite nanofiber catalyst systems for use in fuel cell electrodes
JP2001185459A (en) * 1999-10-15 2001-07-06 Mitsubishi Chemicals Corp Electrochemical capacitor
US6872403B2 (en) * 2000-02-01 2005-03-29 University Of Kentucky Research Foundation Polymethylmethacrylate augmented with carbon nanotubes
US6599961B1 (en) 2000-02-01 2003-07-29 University Of Kentucky Research Foundation Polymethylmethacrylate augmented with carbon nanotubes
US6489025B2 (en) 2000-04-12 2002-12-03 Showa Denko K.K. Fine carbon fiber, method for producing the same and electrically conducting material comprising the fine carbon fiber
WO2002008748A2 (en) * 2000-07-10 2002-01-31 Aurora Biosciences Corporation Ion channel assay methods
US7399599B2 (en) 2000-07-10 2008-07-15 Vertex Pharmaceuticals (San Diego) Llc Ion channel assay methods
US7615356B2 (en) * 2000-07-10 2009-11-10 Vertex Pharmaceuticals (San Diego) Llc Ion channel assay methods
US6706248B2 (en) * 2001-03-19 2004-03-16 General Electric Company Carbon nitrogen nanofiber compositions of specific morphology, and method for their preparation
MXPA04003996A (en) * 2001-10-29 2004-07-23 Hyperion Catalysis Int Polymer containing functionalized carbon nanotubes.
US7147966B2 (en) * 2001-11-30 2006-12-12 The Trustees Of Boston College Coated carbon nanotube array electrodes
US6764628B2 (en) * 2002-03-04 2004-07-20 Honeywell International Inc. Composite material comprising oriented carbon nanotubes in a carbon matrix and process for preparing same
US6779729B2 (en) * 2002-04-15 2004-08-24 Milliken & Company Optical disc storage containers that facilitate detection of the presence of optical and/or audio discs stored therein
JP2006508636A (en) * 2002-05-08 2006-03-16 ザ・ボード・オブ・トラスティーズ・オブ・ザ・レランド・スタンフォード・ジュニア・ユニバーシティ Nanotube mat with an array of conduits
AU2003265247A1 (en) * 2002-06-18 2003-12-31 The University Of Akron Fibrous protein-immobilization systems
US6916758B2 (en) * 2002-06-18 2005-07-12 The University Of Akron Fibrous catalyst-immobilization systems
US7061749B2 (en) * 2002-07-01 2006-06-13 Georgia Tech Research Corporation Supercapacitor having electrode material comprising single-wall carbon nanotubes and process for making the same
US20040240152A1 (en) * 2003-05-30 2004-12-02 Schott Joachim Hossick Capacitor and method for producing a capacitor
US7079377B2 (en) * 2002-09-30 2006-07-18 Joachim Hossick Schott Capacitor and method for producing a capacitor
DE602004028298D1 (en) 2003-03-07 2010-09-02 Seldon Technologies Llc Cleaning liquids with nanomaterials
US20100098877A1 (en) * 2003-03-07 2010-04-22 Cooper Christopher H Large scale manufacturing of nanostructured material
US7419601B2 (en) * 2003-03-07 2008-09-02 Seldon Technologies, Llc Nanomesh article and method of using the same for purifying fluids
US20050038498A1 (en) * 2003-04-17 2005-02-17 Nanosys, Inc. Medical device applications of nanostructured surfaces
US7972616B2 (en) * 2003-04-17 2011-07-05 Nanosys, Inc. Medical device applications of nanostructured surfaces
EP1618223A2 (en) * 2003-04-28 2006-01-25 Nanosys, Inc. Super-hydrophobic surfaces, methods of their construction and uses therefor
US7255781B2 (en) * 2003-05-01 2007-08-14 Ut-Battelle, Llc Production of aligned microfibers and nanofibers and derived functional monoliths
US7803574B2 (en) * 2003-05-05 2010-09-28 Nanosys, Inc. Medical device applications of nanostructured surfaces
DE202004009060U1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-08-12 Blue Membranes Gmbh Biocompatible coated medical implants
US6842328B2 (en) * 2003-05-30 2005-01-11 Joachim Hossick Schott Capacitor and method for producing a capacitor
US7256982B2 (en) 2003-05-30 2007-08-14 Philip Michael Lessner Electrolytic capacitor
US7432221B2 (en) * 2003-06-03 2008-10-07 Korea Institute Of Energy Research Electrocatalyst for fuel cells using support body resistant to carbon monoxide poisoning
US7509961B2 (en) * 2003-10-27 2009-03-31 Philip Morris Usa Inc. Cigarettes and cigarette components containing nanostructured fibril materials
JP4223042B2 (en) * 2003-11-10 2009-02-12 帝人株式会社 Method for producing carbon fiber nonwoven fabric
US7093351B2 (en) * 2003-12-30 2006-08-22 Lockheed Martin Corporation System, for matching harnesses of conductors with apertures in connectors
US20050170177A1 (en) * 2004-01-29 2005-08-04 Crawford Julian S. Conductive filament
US7762801B2 (en) * 2004-04-08 2010-07-27 Research Triangle Institute Electrospray/electrospinning apparatus and method
US7134857B2 (en) * 2004-04-08 2006-11-14 Research Triangle Institute Electrospinning of fibers using a rotatable spray head
US7592277B2 (en) * 2005-05-17 2009-09-22 Research Triangle Institute Nanofiber mats and production methods thereof
US7297305B2 (en) * 2004-04-08 2007-11-20 Research Triangle Institute Electrospinning in a controlled gaseous environment
CN1309770C (en) * 2004-05-19 2007-04-11 中国航空工业第一集团公司北京航空材料研究院 High volume fraction carbon nanotube array - resin base composite materials and method for preparing same
US7838165B2 (en) * 2004-07-02 2010-11-23 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Carbon fiber synthesizing catalyst and method of making thereof
US7566749B2 (en) * 2004-08-31 2009-07-28 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Conductive thermosets by extrusion
WO2006065431A2 (en) * 2004-11-17 2006-06-22 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Method for preparing catalyst supports and supported catalysts from single walled carbon nanotubes
US7459013B2 (en) * 2004-11-19 2008-12-02 International Business Machines Corporation Chemical and particulate filters containing chemically modified carbon nanotube structures
DE102005041378A1 (en) * 2005-09-01 2007-03-08 Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe Gmbh Modified carbon nanoparticles, process for their preparation and their use
JP2009508999A (en) * 2005-09-16 2009-03-05 ハイピリオン カタリシス インターナショナル インコーポレイテッド Conductive silicone and method for producing the same
WO2007103422A1 (en) * 2006-03-07 2007-09-13 Clemson University Mesoporous carbon fiber with a hollow interior or a convoluted surface
WO2008063698A1 (en) * 2006-04-21 2008-05-29 Drexel University Patterning nanotubes with vapor deposition
CN100387762C (en) * 2006-07-10 2008-05-14 浙江大学 Polyacrylonitrile mesopore-macropore ultrafine carbon fiber and its preparation method
WO2008039808A2 (en) 2006-09-25 2008-04-03 Board Of Regents, The University Of Texas System Cation-substituted spinel oxide and oxyfluoride cathodes for lithium ion batteries
DE102006062113A1 (en) * 2006-12-23 2008-06-26 Philipps-Universität Marburg Particle-modified nano- and mesofibres
US8499645B2 (en) * 2007-02-21 2013-08-06 The Board Of Trustees Of The University Of Illinois Stress micro mechanical test cell, device, system and methods
US8497225B2 (en) * 2007-08-27 2013-07-30 Nanotek Instruments, Inc. Method of producing graphite-carbon composite electrodes for supercapacitors
US7948739B2 (en) * 2007-08-27 2011-05-24 Nanotek Instruments, Inc. Graphite-carbon composite electrode for supercapacitors
US7875219B2 (en) * 2007-10-04 2011-01-25 Nanotek Instruments, Inc. Process for producing nano-scaled graphene platelet nanocomposite electrodes for supercapacitors
WO2009073854A1 (en) * 2007-12-06 2009-06-11 Nanosys, Inc. Resorbable nanoenhanced hemostatic structures and bandage materials
US8319002B2 (en) * 2007-12-06 2012-11-27 Nanosys, Inc. Nanostructure-enhanced platelet binding and hemostatic structures
US9190667B2 (en) 2008-07-28 2015-11-17 Nanotek Instruments, Inc. Graphene nanocomposites for electrochemical cell electrodes
US8540889B1 (en) 2008-11-19 2013-09-24 Nanosys, Inc. Methods of generating liquidphobic surfaces
EP2196260A1 (en) * 2008-12-02 2010-06-16 Research Institute of Petroleum Industry (RIPI) Hydrodesulphurization nanocatalyst, its use and a process for its production
US7991340B2 (en) * 2009-12-16 2011-08-02 Xerox Corporation Fuser member
KR101084076B1 (en) * 2010-05-06 2011-11-16 삼성에스디아이 주식회사 Positive active material for rechargeable lithium battery and rechargeable lithium battery including same
DE102010021691A1 (en) 2010-05-27 2011-12-01 Leibniz-Institut Für Neue Materialien Gemeinnützige Gmbh Layer composite with a one-dimensional composite structure
US8571267B2 (en) 2010-06-02 2013-10-29 Indian Institute Of Technology Kanpur Image based structural characterization of fibrous materials
US8211535B2 (en) 2010-06-07 2012-07-03 Xerox Corporation Nano-fibrils in a fuser member
KR101627597B1 (en) 2010-07-30 2016-06-08 이엠디 밀리포어 코포레이션 Non-woven bed
KR101851317B1 (en) * 2011-07-26 2018-05-31 삼성전자주식회사 porous carbonaceous composite material, cathode and lithium air battery comprsing the material, and preparation method thereof
CN102491308A (en) * 2011-11-25 2012-06-13 卓心康 Method for synthesis of carbon nanostructure material by using organic material
WO2013106983A1 (en) * 2012-01-16 2013-07-25 Fudan University Process for preparing a core-shell structured lithtated manganese oxide
EP2973786B1 (en) 2013-03-15 2023-03-01 Wellstat BioCatalysis, LLC Methods of making nanofiber electrodes for batteries
CN103882559B (en) * 2014-03-13 2016-01-20 中国科学院化学研究所 High-ratio surface porous carbon fiber and preparation method thereof and application
CN105131321A (en) * 2014-06-04 2015-12-09 苏州高通新材料科技有限公司 Method for treatment of organic polymer material with acid, and functionalized-graphene-containing powder product with carbon material attached to the surface
ES2877563T3 (en) * 2014-09-02 2021-11-17 Emd Millipore Corp Chromotography media comprising discrete porous arrays of nanofibrils
SG11201703399QA (en) 2014-12-08 2017-05-30 Emd Millipore Corp Mixed bed ion exchange adsorber
WO2017188110A1 (en) * 2016-04-27 2017-11-02 東レ株式会社 Porous fiber, absorbing material, and purifying column
WO2019212905A1 (en) 2018-04-30 2019-11-07 Lyten, Inc. Lithium ion battery and battery materials
US11555799B2 (en) 2018-01-04 2023-01-17 Lyten, Inc. Multi-part nontoxic printed batteries
CN111088528B (en) * 2018-10-24 2021-12-14 中国石油化工股份有限公司 Conductive spinning solution, preparation method and application of conductive acrylic fiber
US11299397B2 (en) 2019-07-30 2022-04-12 Lyten, Inc. 3D self-assembled multi-modal carbon-based particles integrated into a continuous electrode film layer
US11335911B2 (en) 2019-08-23 2022-05-17 Lyten, Inc. Expansion-tolerant three-dimensional (3D) carbon-based structures incorporated into lithium sulfur (Li S) battery electrodes
US11489161B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-11-01 Lyten, Inc. Powdered materials including carbonaceous structures for lithium-sulfur battery cathodes
US11398622B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-07-26 Lyten, Inc. Protective layer including tin fluoride disposed on a lithium anode in a lithium-sulfur battery
US11309545B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-04-19 Lyten, Inc. Carbonaceous materials for lithium-sulfur batteries
US11539074B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-12-27 Lyten, Inc. Artificial solid electrolyte interface (A-SEI) cap layer including graphene layers with flexible wrinkle areas
US11631893B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2023-04-18 Lyten, Inc. Artificial solid electrolyte interface cap layer for an anode in a Li S battery system
US11342561B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-05-24 Lyten, Inc. Protective polymeric lattices for lithium anodes in lithium-sulfur batteries
US11508966B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2022-11-22 Lyten, Inc. Protective carbon layer for lithium (Li) metal anodes
US11127941B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2021-09-21 Lyten, Inc. Carbon-based structures for incorporation into lithium (Li) ion battery electrodes
US11127942B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2021-09-21 Lyten, Inc. Systems and methods of manufacture of carbon based structures incorporated into lithium ion and lithium sulfur (li s) battery electrodes
US11133495B2 (en) 2019-10-25 2021-09-28 Lyten, Inc. Advanced lithium (LI) ion and lithium sulfur (LI S) batteries
WO2023274884A1 (en) 2021-06-28 2023-01-05 Trevira Gmbh Electrically conductive yarn
US11870063B1 (en) 2022-10-24 2024-01-09 Lyten, Inc. Dual layer gradient cathode electrode structure for reducing sulfide transfer

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4205025A (en) * 1975-12-22 1980-05-27 Champion International Corporation Synthetic polymeric fibrids, fibrid products and process for their production
US4663230A (en) * 1984-12-06 1987-05-05 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Carbon fibrils, method for producing same and compositions containing same
US5021516A (en) * 1989-06-26 1991-06-04 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Poly(perfluoroether)acyl peroxides
US5165909A (en) * 1984-12-06 1992-11-24 Hyperion Catalysis Int'l., Inc. Carbon fibrils and method for producing same

Family Cites Families (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4013751A (en) * 1971-10-29 1977-03-22 Gulf Research & Development Company Fibrils and processes for the manufacture thereof
US5171560A (en) * 1984-12-06 1992-12-15 Hyperion Catalysis International Carbon fibrils, method for producing same, and encapsulated catalyst
US4992332A (en) * 1986-02-04 1991-02-12 Ube Industries, Ltd. Porous hollow fiber
DE68929502T2 (en) * 1988-01-28 2004-09-23 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc., Lexington carbon fibrils
JP2687794B2 (en) * 1991-10-31 1997-12-08 日本電気株式会社 Graphite fiber with cylindrical structure
US5569635A (en) * 1994-05-22 1996-10-29 Hyperion Catalysts, Int'l., Inc. Catalyst supports, supported catalysts and methods of making and using the same
US5346683A (en) * 1993-03-26 1994-09-13 Gas Research Institute Uncapped and thinned carbon nanotubes and process
US5681657A (en) * 1995-02-02 1997-10-28 Rainer H. Frey Biocompatible porous hollow fiber and method of manufacture and use thereof
US5866424A (en) * 1995-07-10 1999-02-02 Bayer Corporation Stable liquid urobilinogen control composition

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4205025A (en) * 1975-12-22 1980-05-27 Champion International Corporation Synthetic polymeric fibrids, fibrid products and process for their production
US4663230A (en) * 1984-12-06 1987-05-05 Hyperion Catalysis International, Inc. Carbon fibrils, method for producing same and compositions containing same
US5165909A (en) * 1984-12-06 1992-11-24 Hyperion Catalysis Int'l., Inc. Carbon fibrils and method for producing same
US5021516A (en) * 1989-06-26 1991-06-04 E. I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company Poly(perfluoroether)acyl peroxides

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6858349B1 (en) 2000-09-07 2005-02-22 The Gillette Company Battery cathode
WO2004101177A2 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-11-25 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for coating substrates with a carbon-based material
WO2004101433A2 (en) * 2003-05-16 2004-11-25 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for producing a porous, carbon-based material
WO2004101177A3 (en) * 2003-05-16 2005-03-03 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for coating substrates with a carbon-based material
WO2004101433A3 (en) * 2003-05-16 2005-03-03 Blue Membranes Gmbh Method for producing a porous, carbon-based material
EA009837B1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2008-04-28 Синвеншн Аг Method for producing a porous, carbon-based material
US7371425B2 (en) 2003-05-16 2008-05-13 Cinvention Ag Method for coating substrates with a carbon-based material
EA010387B1 (en) * 2003-05-16 2008-08-29 Синвеншн Аг Method for coating substrates with a carbon-based material
EP1639159B1 (en) 2003-06-30 2015-07-29 The Procter & Gamble Company Coated nanofiber webs
EP1639159B2 (en) 2003-06-30 2018-07-18 The Procter & Gamble Company Coated nanofiber webs

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0907773A1 (en) 1999-04-14
US6099960A (en) 2000-08-08
BR9710708A (en) 1999-08-17
JP2000510201A (en) 2000-08-08
DE69736519T2 (en) 2007-05-10
AU722823B2 (en) 2000-08-10
IL126977A0 (en) 1999-09-22
CN1225695A (en) 1999-08-11
ATE336610T1 (en) 2006-09-15
DE69736519D1 (en) 2006-09-28
EP0907773B1 (en) 2006-08-16
EP0907773A4 (en) 1999-05-12
AU2939697A (en) 1997-12-05
JP3983292B2 (en) 2007-09-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
AU722823B2 (en) High surface area nanofibers
AU707522B2 (en) Functionalized nanotubes
AU2002336675C1 (en) Polymer containing functionalized carbon nanotubes
AU721291C (en) Graphitic nanofibers in electrochemical capacitors
WO1996018059A9 (en) Functionalized fibrils
AU2002336675A1 (en) Polymer containing functionalized carbon nanotubes
KR100522108B1 (en) High surface area nano fiber
CA2255025C (en) High surface area nanofibers
KR100524369B1 (en) Graphite Nano Fiber for Electrochemical Capacitor
AU765403B2 (en) Graphitic nanofibers in electrochemical capacitors

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 97196484.X

Country of ref document: CN

AK Designated states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AL AM AT AU AZ BA BB BG BR BY CA CH CN CU CZ DE DK EE ES FI GB GE GH HU IL IS JP KE KG KP KR KZ LK LR LS LT LU LV MD MG MK MN MW MX NO NZ PL PT RO RU SD SE SG SI SK TJ TM TR TT UA UG UZ VN YU AM AZ BY KG KZ MD RU TJ TM

AL Designated countries for regional patents

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): GH KE LS MW SD SZ UG AT BE CH DE DK ES FI FR GB GR IE IT LU MC NL PT SE BF BJ CF

121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application
DFPE Request for preliminary examination filed prior to expiration of 19th month from priority date (pct application filed before 20040101)
ENP Entry into the national phase

Ref document number: 2255025

Country of ref document: CA

Ref document number: 2255025

Country of ref document: CA

Kind code of ref document: A

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1019980709168

Country of ref document: KR

Ref document number: PA/A/1998/009491

Country of ref document: MX

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 1997923634

Country of ref document: EP

REG Reference to national code

Ref country code: DE

Ref legal event code: 8642

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1997923634

Country of ref document: EP

WWP Wipo information: published in national office

Ref document number: 1019980709168

Country of ref document: KR

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1019980709168

Country of ref document: KR

WWG Wipo information: grant in national office

Ref document number: 1997923634

Country of ref document: EP